Meet the masses: how to build powerful public Trello boards
This blog post is part of the Trello Day Replay series of talks given by members of the Trello team, Google, and Typeform about different ways they’re using Trello to be more effective in life and work. For more inspiration, check out the rest of the talks here. You and your team use Trello to keep projects organized, hit deadlines, and ensure that you have a plan for the future. But have you considered using it as a way of communicating with your users? Take advantage of one of the best core features in Trello to help spread awareness about your work:
Ready, set, code: how engineering teams use Trello
Engineering teams know that every detail matters. Whether creating new features, fixing bugs, or refactoring an entire architecture, engineers know that one tiny semicolon out of place can break the whole build.
7 inspiring templates from the Trello community: from productivity to podcasts, parenting & more
The Trello community is filled with proactive people and inspiring individuals who want to broadcast their board wins with the world. For the full spectrum of Trello community templates and tips, head to Trello Inspiration: A resource you can use to search for, explore, and copy Trello boards for just about any project or need.
How to find Trello board templates, samples & inspiration for every idea
There comes a time in every Trellist’s journey to peak perspective when they must gaze upward from behind the screen to seek answers and insight:
The ultimate guide to planning a wedding with Trello
When you start down the road to matrimony, glossy wedding magazines and carefully curated blogs might lead you to believe that wedding planning is nothing but delicious cake tastings, fun formalwear fittings, and Pinterest-worthy handcrafted decor. It’s true: getting married can be all of these things! It can also be a reality check: Planning a wedding is about you, your spouse-to-be, and your closest family and friends banding together as a team to pull off a large, complicated project with a strict deadline and budget.
How to use Trello for customer support teams
If there is one team that deserves a high five and a smile at the beginning and end of each work day, it’s the customer support team. From balancing the endless flow of support tickets, help requests, and feedback to celebrating successes and sending swag, customer support specialists are often the glue between internal and external communications. They make sure that customers get the answers they need, and that internal teams learn what the customers want most from a product or service.
Trello for hr: the best boards for people teams
If there’s one team that has a pulse on the inner workings of an organization, it’s the folks in the human resources department. They are both in the background and at the front lines of the company to make sure every employee is happy and productive. We’re sure you agree: HR’ers are key players in the development, growth, and success of a business.
Introducing Trello for Google chat: bring chat and project management together
G Suite fans get ready, because you can now get your Trello alerts in Google Chat! As more teams are using technology to evolve the ways in which they communicate, the importance of seamless chat and collaboration (or chatlaboration as I’ve coined it) has never been more urgent.
Show the love: see your collaboration clearly with emoji reactions
Forget the candy hearts, the bouquet of roses, and the milk chocolate Cupid. You’re receiving the greatest Valentine’s Day gift of all: emoji reactions in Trello. We figured there was no better way to say for being so , by making us on social media, for so many inspiring projects, and creating a community that makes us feel . Thank you!
How to easily plan a remote team offsite (hint: crowdsource it)
Trello’s marketing team is remotely distributed, so our annual offsite is the opportunity for everyone on the team to connect in person. Those connections and good vibes carry forward for many months to come as we strive to assume positive intent in all of our interactions.

