Truth be told, “best” depends on your needs. But, we’ve asked some smart, efficient people their favourite apps for working with groups. We’ve added our own research to discover the better “herding cats” tools.
Let us know what you think!
Recommended: Doodle – the easiest. Within 1 minute you can prepare a meeting description and enter choices to select for all users invited to your meeting. They click their available times and a winner is found.
Also check out: Calendly: Ideal if you organise lots of meetings and want other people to choose from your available times. Share your personal Calendly links. They pick an available time and the event is added to your calendar. (note: doesn’t integrate with Mac ical). ScheduleOnce is more an enterprise product. x.ai – Copy Amy, your virtual assistant on your email and she corresponds with the group to find a common meeting time and diarise it.
Note: Room booking – Robinpowered to take the headache out of managing who’s booked where when.
Recommended: Prezi. The templates are more contemporary and varied than Powerpoint or Keynote. Plus it’s collaborative in real time. Done!
Rather than try to keep track of emails by thread, group messaging tools let the team talk by topic. It’s basically Whattsapp on steroids. Slack is first choice for its ease of use and ability to integrate with other services such as Skype. You’re able to upload and share files with them too. Also check out: Hipchat (by Australian company Atlassian) still has a substantial following. And you can’t count out Microsoft’s Yammer, which has deep ties into Office 365.
Also recommended – Basecamp is an online project-management platform that lets a number of people collaborate on a project.You can track projects and tasks via to-do lists, host written discussions, embed media files (images, videos). It’s simple and you can send email notifications to your inbox when a task or discussion is relevant to you. Also check out: Asana to keep critical info in one place like a bank.
It’s easy and collaborative. Also check out: Any.do. It’s key differentiator is “the moment”: a push notification you get each morning telling you to plan your day. There are also a few other cool things like voice entry and the ability to shake your device to clear finished tasks.
Collect for office group gifts online – no more hassling for money.
GroupTogether.com is an Australian website that makes it easy to collect for office farewells, get wells, baby gifts etc. They don’t sell gifts. They collect the money, handle reminders and card. It’s easy and free to set up quicker than you can walk round with a big card. Share a link or add emails. Anyone who chips in online can add a message and pic to the card. They transfer the money to you in one go so you can buy whatever you like. People who use it say that they collect 5 times the amount and with less hassle.
Instant group polling in real time for presentations + quizzes
Polleverywhere helped create the field of vote-by-texting. Their systems can handle huge audiences and display immediate results. Also check out – Zeetings and Getahoot is the simplest (designed for kids).
Group brainstorming that’s visual and online
Mural.ly Let’s you use virtual sticky notes to contribute ideas and then sort them spacially to organize them
Screen Sharing – let’s everyone see your screen live on their screen.
“Because it’s so fast to set up a meeting and share a link, it works even if I’m already mid-call when I realize I need to share my screen.” – Harvard Business Review Online
Already 8000 people have signed up for the pre-launch of ScribblePost, a to-do app that’s described as the world’s first productivity network. Capture meeting notes in ScribblePost, tag (#) important actions and ‘@ mention’ people while you’re typing. Then simply share the note with meeting participants to distribute follow-up actions. It’s easy to sort by person or topic and it integrates with your email account. Great for minute taking, sharing and searchable, sortable to-do lists.
Special thanks for your expertise to:
Andrew Pritchett
James Dellow
Daniel Ciampi
Katrina Brangwin
Birthday time for toddlers is rather magical: watching them rip open gifts, listening to the squeals of delight and seeing those smiling faces. What’s not so magical is the well-intentioned
Celebrate the Silly Season – new invitations
Whether you are inviting friends to chip in for a holiday bash, or inviting parents to contribute for a thank you gift for the Teacher,