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Teamlab offers some clear advantages for work groups with multiple projects.

June 27, 2012

The recent wholesale upgrade to the Jackson Free Press website was quite an undertaking. For the first time since 2002, we have completely changed not just to a new design, but to an entire new โ€œbackendโ€ as well, switching to a different Content Management System, or CMS, for our stories, events, restaurant listings and so on.

Upgrades in the past had all been in the same family of products, from one company (pMachine, later Expression Engine, by EllisLabs), with a defined upgrade path. Now, everything has changed, in an effort to bring a fully modern newspaper website to our readers. Already the site is better at presenting content such as photos, videos, related stories, documents and other items we think are important for our readers (and fun for us); over the next few weeks weโ€™ll roll out new tools, including improvements to the mobile-enabled site, more options for online discussions and, well, a couple of very cool surprises.

This process, believe it or not, has taken about six months, from learning the basics of the tool weโ€™re using to getting the import script to work (a huge one), figuring out how to bring along a decadeโ€™s worth of our all-important reader comments (and discussions) from our earlier sites, and building out the new design. (Hats off, by the way, to Matt Heindl, our primary architect of this transition, who has had help from the whole team including Kristin Brenemen, Latasha Willis and Dustin Cardon.)

And having been through this process, I now fully realize the value of having a good project management toolโ€”and using it!

When the project started, our vendor set us up in Basecamp (basecamp.com), the project management tool from 37 Signals that is very popular in โ€œsiliconโ€ circles. Basecamp is attractively designed, gives you a way to offer a repository for information (like links to documentation, FAQs, etc.) and has support for ToDos, milestones, and even whiteboards for sharing documents and brainstorming sessions among one another.

Basecamp is a great way to manage a project, and probably gave us everything we needed for managing this website transitionโ€”we just didnโ€™t use it much, at least on our end. As Iโ€™ve mentioned in previous columns, Iโ€™m a little addicted to Workflowy (www.workflowy.com), and Matt and I would primarily use it to note bugs, design ideas, feature implementation questions and so on. That gets a bit messy thoughโ€”sort of the virtual version of the eight different used envelopes I have sitting on my desk right now covered with notes and ToDo items. (Yes, seriously.)

For me, one great feature in Basecamp is the way it handles discussionsโ€”if youโ€™re part of a message thread, then youโ€™re alerted when someone says something new on that thread. Replying above their reply (in email) places your response on the Basecamp site, where you can later return to that discussion to see what was said. That combination of email and web-based message board is great for keeping discussions from getting too wound up in โ€œreply allโ€ purgatory, plus theyโ€™re easier to browse and search.

Milestones and to-do lists are easy enough to use, although if I have one minor gripe itโ€™s that they seem to assume projects take relatively few steps. For quickly listing lots of bugs or quick fixes or fast notes, I like a tool like Workflowy more. (Of course, you could link a shared Workflowy to your project if desired.)

If I have a major dig for Basecamp, itโ€™s that they charge based on the number of projects you want to manageโ€”which means itโ€™s impractical for something like managing a weekly newspaper with a new project for each issue. Thatโ€™s one reason Iโ€™ve been looking closely at TeamLab (teamlab.com) these past few weeks.

While I feel like Basecamp is really nice for managing a group of freelancers or far-flung project participants, TeamLab is nicely geared for managing a lot of the interaction for a small to medium-sized business. With CRM and a community dashboard built in, youโ€™ve got an โ€œintranetโ€ solution with all of the potential of a shared address book, customer tracker, and the ability to share a lot of info with your co-workers using forums, blogs, live chat and wikis.

Having the project management tools built into this overall intranet is nice; Iโ€™d say the Basecamp experience is a bit slicker, but TeamLab offers some clear advantages, such as the option to store editable documents directly within the project itself (you can create documents, spreadsheets, presentations and drawings) and edit them as a group. TeamLab also has a time-tracking tool built in, which is nice if youโ€™re billing clients by the hour.

TeamLab is free for initial use, and then they charge based on the amount of storage space you useโ€”$49 per month for an extra 50 GB of storage (you get 1 GB for free). A built-in email client is planned for a future upgrade, which could really set TeamLab up as a tool your employees spend most of their day in, hopefully making them more organized and productive along the way.

Comment and email Todd Stauffer at todd@jacksonfreepress.com.

Previous Comments

Todd, we are so glad that Teamlab helps you and you find our product useful! Thank you for covering and good luck) TeamLab Team


What CMS are you using now? Drupal or Joomla or something else?


Mark, thanks for posting. I’m about to try TeamLab for editorial project management. I have high hopes that it might work well for us.


Donna, if you have any questions or suggestions, please, feel free to contact us in our [Facebook community][1] or directly via email – info@teamlab.com Teamlab Team [1]: http://www.facebook.com/TeamLab