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How to Leverage Dropbox Paper to Organize Small Teams and Projects

Via third-party integrations, Dropbox Paper enables teams to build workspaces that share content on other web services using a living document metaphor.

For organizations that use Dropbox, the recently revamped Dropbox Paper application gives teams a way to manage collaborative processes within a “sheet of paper” metaphor. IT organizations can use Paper for their own needs as well as provide it to end user teams that need to stand up a simple workplace to quickly collaborate around content.

Dropbox Paper doesn’t try to do too much on its own, which makes it easy to use. At its core, it behaves like a mashup of a wiki and simple project management application. By including commenting, to-do lists, timeline task views and the ability to @mention team members, it has enough team collaboration capabilities that it can be broadly applicable while not requiring users to learn too many new ways to work. Think of it not as replacing broader team collaboration tools, but as a very focused, free tool that a particular set of users could get considerable value from.

Paper’s simple feature set belies an ability to do some sophisticated content-based collaboration, however. It includes a code editor and support for LaTeX symbols, the ability to embed content from the Dropbox enterprise content sharing and collaboration, and some third-party applications. All of this makes it appealing as a simple workspace for some IT teams or business users with technical skill sets.

While Dropbox Paper uses a “sheet of paper” metaphor similar to Onepgr’s, it differs from  Onepgr’s real-time collaboration focus. Like Onepgr, however, IT organizations can use Paper’s third-party app integration as a way to create tailored workspaces around particular use cases. For example, IT and digital design teams that use Adobe XD, Figma, Framer, InVision or Marvel App for user interface design can drop content design ideas via a share link onto a Paper workspace for commenting.

At a basic level, these embedded views of documents in other applications can provide a dashboard of files residing on other services. As a best practice, the Dropbox Paper workspace can be a documentation tool for tracking design changes with an easy way to compare iterations of an idea in a single space. The aforementioned code editor also provides a means of documenting and sharing code snippets.

Teams that do a considerable amount of research and analysis should consider Dropbox Paper for its support of Lucidchart, LaTeX symbols, and the Python and R languages in the code editor. As with the design example, the workspace can function not only as collaborative space but as a means to document the evolution of data analysis and algorithm design.

DropboxPaper has a few integrations that could help marketing teams as well. It integrates with Instagram, Unsplash (a site for sharing free stock photography and images), YouTube, Slideshare, Prezi and Speaker Deck.

Companies that use Airtable or Trello can also integrate those applications with Dropbox Paper. The Airtable integration embeds a small view of a data table in the document. It provides enough visibility to do a quick scroll through the data and look at a full record. Trello integration applies just to cards, using the card’s link. The integration really just gives a way to track Trello status within a Paper doc. You can’t edit the embedded card, but any changes to the card from within Trello appear in the embedded card in real-time.  

An interesting dichotomy exists in the usability features that could drive adoption within an organization. It has a simple but effective notation format for users that are keyboard- and text-driven. For example, typing two brackets with a character space between them [ ] starts a to-do list. To start the LaTeX editor, simply start a line with $$.  For those who want the social aspects of collaboration, it integrates with Giphy and includes a good collection of emoticons and stickers.  

TAGS: Conferencing
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