Friday, 12 January 2018


Thing 12 – Collaborative Tools

#thing12

The last collaborative project that I worked on was a report we were commissioned to write for an external organisation. Some of the work was face to face, as it was the responsibility of my department to produce the final report, but also some of it was virtually as other contributors came from other departments, some of which were in physically different offices.   It was a rather large and complex report, but as a large company we use iManage, which means files are saved in locations that everyone can access, there is version control on documents as well as the ability so see previously saved versions, there is access control based on user permissions, and along with the usual track lining facilities in Microsoft Word, it made the process a lot easier to manage.

However, there is  still a lot of “manual” control over a project this large – the report was broken down into chapters,  diagrams and graphs were doled out to marketing teams to create, and dropped in at the end, the bibliography and footnotes had to be carefully cultivated from all the disparate parts. In hindsight, and now having done the Rudai 23 online networking portion of the course, I think perhaps something like Trello might have kept a better handle on some elements of the process – and helped with the last minute checks that everything was in and in order before we reached the deadline!

On a more personal level I have used Google Docs for planning my sister’s hen weekend – a more formidable task that you might at first expect – but it was an excellent way of keeping tabs on all participants and which parts of the weekend they were included in, who needed accommodation etc.

Overall I would say that using a collaborative tool is most definitely a positive, especially if you might have any “rogue elements” in your team – e.g. the person who is just not good at communicating what needs to be done, what has been changed etc.  Or the person who is not good at consistently saving and backing up their work.  Or just for the simple task of not losing sight of a “Master Document”!

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