---
title: ClickUp Task Communication — Best Practices for Cross-Team Coordination
type: article
created: '2026-04-05'
updated: '2026-04-05'
source_docs:
- raw/2025-10-02-ben-check-in-91515063.md
tags:
- project-management
- clickup
- team-collaboration
- communication
- workflow
layer: 2
client_source: null
industry_context: null
transferable: true
---

# ClickUp Task Communication — Best Practices for Cross-Team Coordination

## Overview

Creating a ClickUp task is not the same as communicating a request. Until you have an established rhythm with a teammate, you cannot assume they saw a task just because you created it. This is especially true when working across functions — e.g., a digital marketer requesting work from a design team that is already at capacity.

The practices below are drawn from real coordination challenges and apply broadly to any cross-team request workflow.

---

## The "Carpet Bomb" Strategy

When working with someone for the first time, or when a request is time-sensitive, use a multi-channel approach to ensure acknowledgment:

1. **Create the ClickUp task** — assign it to the right person, mention their name in the task, and set a clear due date and priority.
2. **Send a Slack message** — notify them directly with a link to the task, a brief explanation of why it matters, and a request for confirmation.
3. **Follow up with an email** — especially for high-stakes or deadline-driven requests.

> "You create the ClickUp task, you mention their name on the ClickUp task, you assign it to them. Then you send them something in Slack and say, 'I just created this new task, here's the link, it's really important.' And then maybe even send them an email. Just hit them pretty hard right up front and make sure they acknowledge it."
> — Mark Hope

The goal is not to be annoying — it is to ensure the request is seen and confirmed before assuming it is in motion.

---

## Why Tasks Get Missed

- Designers and other specialists are often **at capacity** with existing work. A new task in ClickUp may not surface above the noise.
- Teams **prioritize work from people they know and trust**. A new collaborator may find their tasks deprioritized simply due to unfamiliarity.
- **ClickUp configuration errors** (wrong assignee, wrong list, wrong visibility settings) can silently prevent a task from appearing in someone's queue.

Audit your ClickUp setup early when working with a new team. Confirm that tasks are visible to the intended recipient before assuming the workflow is correct.

---

## Building Relationships to Improve Prioritization

Task management tools only go so far. The underlying driver of prioritization is often **relationship and trust**. Practical steps:

- **Set up recurring syncs** with key collaborators (e.g., a weekly call with a design lead) to stay aligned and surface blockers early.
- **Get to know individuals on the team** — not just the team as a whole. A direct relationship with a specific designer makes it easier to ask for help, get honest feedback on timelines, and understand the queue.
- **Treat account managers as internal customers.** They often have the organizational leverage to escalate or unblock requests. If an account manager advocates for your work, it moves faster.

> "They sometimes prioritize things based on who they want to work with. Learn how to work with those guys. Get good at it."
> — Mark Hope

---

## Practical Checklist for Cross-Team Requests

- [ ] Task created in ClickUp with correct assignee, list, and due date
- [ ] Teammate's name mentioned in the task
- [ ] Slack message sent with task link and context
- [ ] Acknowledgment received (reply, comment, or reaction)
- [ ] Recurring sync scheduled if this is an ongoing working relationship

---

## Related

- [[clients/crazy-lennys/index]] — context where these coordination issues first surfaced
- [[knowledge/project-management/working-with-design-teams]] *(if created)*
- [[knowledge/digital-marketing/landing-page-strategy]] *(if created)*