Setting up Telegram channels and groups

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Fourteen settings screens before you publish your first post. Username taken. Admin permissions unclear. Pinned message still says "test." You share the link anyway and wonder why subscribers leave by Friday.

Setup is where many Telegram efforts stumble, not because the tools are hard, but because brands skip the basics that tell people what they joined and what to expect. This chapter walks through creating channels and groups, choosing names, setting permissions, and launching cleanly.

How do you create a Telegram channel for business?

Start in the app by creating a new channel, not a group. Pick a public username that matches your brand spelling and is easy to share. Write a short description that states topic, posting frequency, and what subscribers gain. Upload a square logo readable at small size.

Add two or three trusted admins with clear roles: who publishes, who edits, who manages invites. Limit admin count until the workflow is stable. Every extra admin is a security and consistency risk.

When should you use a group instead of a channel?

Use a channel when you broadcast updates. Use a group when members should talk to each other and to your team. Many brands run both: the channel for announcements, the group for discussion linked in the channel description.

Groups need rules pinned at the top: no spam, stay on topic, respect members. Assign moderators before you promote the group link. Unmoderated groups turn toxic fast, and your brand name is attached.

What should your launch checklist include?

Before sharing publicly, publish three starter posts so new joins see activity, not an empty feed. Pin a welcome message with rules, links to your website, and how to get support. Test invite links on mobile and desktop.

Place the link where warm traffic already exists: your site footer, confirmation emails, and profiles on other social accounts. Cold spam invites rarely build quality audiences. For growth tactics after launch, see Telegram marketing and organic growth.

Next chapters cover content types and how Telegram works for business once your foundation is live.

Should your Telegram username match your website domain?

Can you change a channel name after launch?

How many admins should a new channel have?

Do you need a private or public channel?

What belongs in a pinned welcome post?

How do you connect a bot during setup?