TLDR: We don’t need another app for remote teams. It requires fewer. The communication tools that actually work do four jobs: chat, video, async docs, and visual/creative work. You only need one tool per job. Beyond that, you are wasting money and making your conversations more scattered. Ditch any tool that duplicates something you already pay for.
Before you go shopping, see what you already have. Usually the fix isn’t to buy something new but to cut something old.
What is a remote communications stack?
Your stack is the set of tools your team uses to communicate, make decisions, document things, and get work done.
The keyword there is “chosen,” although most teams never really get a choice. The stack kind of grows. Slack throws in. A new hire wants Teams. Designer sends files. First, a project lead spins up Discord. Six months later, you’re paying for 4 apps to do the same job, none of which does it well.
It’s an easy fix.
To each of four jobs, assign one of the tools:
- Chat: fast questions and the daily back-and-forth.
- Video: The Big Stuff Kickoffs, Tough Conversations, and Getting to Know Your Team
- Async docs: information for people to consume at their own pace.
- Visual & creative work: whiteboarding, brainstorming, and design feedback.
According to Vantage Circle’s 2026 analysis, almost every list of Slack, Teams, Google Workspace, Zoom, Notion, Confluence, Miro, and Loom-style video includes the same names. But the brands are less important than the rule: one tool for one job.
Now let’s find out where your team is actually short on jobs.
Top Communication Tools for Remote Teams by Job Role
Chat: Slack vs Microsoft Teams vs Discord
You need one of these. Not all three of them.
- Slack shines for productivity-first teams that live for integrations, but the bill climbs with every active user.
- Microsoft Teams makes sense if you're already on Microsoft 365, since it's bundled in, though the screen feels busy.
- Discord works for a casual vibe and free voice chat, but its admin controls are thin for serious business use.
They got the difference right, too: Slack is for productivity, Discord is for hanging out. The easiest way to waste money, and the easiest to fix, is to run both side by side.
Video: When to use Google Meet and Zoom and when to skip the call
Zoom’s free plan caps group calls at 40 minutes; Pro (around $14.99 per host, per month) has no limit (per Eleken). You only need one video tool. And honestly, video is overkill for anything that could've been a doc or a quick recording. Use live calls for real decisions and real connections.
Async docs: Notion, Confluence & video recordings
This task is the job most teams skip, and it's a mistake every time. Confluence has a free plan; The standard is around $4.89 per user a month. Notion is a flexible wiki that works beautifully. Pair whatever you choose with async video so you document knowledge and make it easy to show. Good docs are the secret to killing half of your meetings.
Visual & Creative Work: Miro, FigJam and the gap most stacks are missing
Miro and FigJam are great for early ideas and brainstorms. But that's where it falls apart: whiteboards are actually useful for talking about design. They don't help with the actual creative work or the feedback, and that's precisely where most stacks quietly break down.
Now, let's talk about what to toss.
Communication tools your remote team can live without
Most tool lists skip this part because they get paid to add tools, not take them away.
Cut these loose:
- Extra chat apps. Slack and Teams and Discord? Pick one. The others are dead weight, and every extra app is another login, another stream of pings, another spot where a message goes to die.
- "Culture" apps that copy chat. That kudos app usually does what a Slack channel and a thumbs-up emoji already do for free.
- Single-use tools your suite already handles. If you pay for Google Workspace, you may not need a separate video app, doc tool, and file-share app on top of it.
If your team makes any visual content, there's one more gap to close the one that stings the most.
Conclusion
Buying yet another app is almost never the answer to better remote communication. It comes from paring down: one tool for one job, async whenever you can, and a simple rule about where things go. Run your stack through all four jobs and cut the overlap and you’ll spend less while your team actually understands each other. Watch out for creative feedback, this is the one that creeps up the most, quietly eating days off your timeline.
Fix the one thing most stacks screw up. If design feedback keeps getting lost in your tools, put it all in one place: start a Penji trial. Your team has a single place to brief, markup, and approve creative work. Most requests are back in 24-48 hours. Unlimited revisions until it’s perfect.