
There is a way to have your Telegram chats in folders and facilitate their organization. This function is native to the app, so you won't have to install anything extra to manage them. If you have many active conversations in your messaging app and you want to organize them by themes, genres, groups, hobbies or more, you will like this trick. Let's see how it's done and how it benefits you.
How to manage your Telegram chats by folders
Telegram is a widely used messaging application in Spain and its main competitor is WhatsApp. This fight between both platforms reaches levels where one copies the functions of the other, but without a doubt the pioneer is Telegram.
This app has innovative functions and one of them is creating folders to organize your chats. WhatsApp has something similar, but it calls it Filters and is used to sort messages by read, unread or group.
In the case of Telegram, what the tool does is allow users to save their chats in folders with a name. This identification can be allusive to a topic discussed or to a group of people such as family, business, friends, soccer games, among others.
To store your Telegram chats in folders, the procedure is quite simple, you just have to Enter the side menu of the app and enter the settings. Scroll the screen down and touch where it says "chat folders" and proceed to create a new one by pressing "create new folder«.

Enter a name to identify the folder and then click on "add chats" to include them. You can create as many folders as you want and place the same chat in several of them, in case the message contains different topics.
Once you have your folder with a name, added chats Press the "save" button located in the upper right corner of the screen. The folder will be displayed on the main Telegram screen as if it were a tab at the top. When you enter, you will see all the stored chats and if you hold down, the editing tools are enabled.
Organizing Telegram chats into folders is quite simple and useful. Now you can access them according to the topic in question, streamlining the attention and response process. What do you think of this functionality?
