One ritual. Many crews.
Setlist runs the same way whether you're a 12-person team, a group of college friends, or a 400-person Discord-refugee book club. The prompt just changes.
A standing meeting that's actually fun
Replace the dead-air #random channel. Setlist gives the team a low-stakes weekly habit that surfaces taste no one knew about — without forcing anyone onto camera.
- "Songs you put on to focus"
- "Best soundtrack moment ever"
- "What was on your headphones in college"
Stay in touch without the group-chat fatigue
The Slack you spun up after college, the parents-of-toddlers crew, the long-distance D&D group. Setlist gives you something to come back to every week without having to think of a topic.
- "A song that reminds you of high school"
- "Wedding first-dance contenders"
- "Songs you secretly love but won't admit"
Discovery without the algorithm
Music nerd Slacks, indie-game Slacks, queer-running Slacks, Smash brackets. Setlist is a way to learn what your people actually listen to — not what Spotify thinks they should.
- "Best track from a debut album"
- "Songs that should be in a Tarantino movie"
- "Anthems for the cause"
A few rules of thumb
- 3+ active people. Below that the votes feel weightless. Above that, things get fun.
- One channel. Setlist lives in one Slack channel — pick the one your crew already hangs out in, not a brand-new one.
- A workspace admin installs. Just once. After that anyone in the channel can play, and Tour owners can run Setlists without admin involvement.
Bring it to your crew.
Free during MVP. Takes about a minute to install and zero training for everyone else.
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