If you’ve ever emailed a document to a bunch of people to review, you know that the experience pretty much sucks. You have no idea if the people you’ve sent the document to actually received it, much less read it. And there’s no good way to get feedback from the people who matter without kicking off a 27-way email chat that wipes out your productivity and pollutes your inbox with “me too” comments.
If anyone’s ever sent you a document to review in email, you know the experience pretty much sucks. Where’d the document go that the vice president asked me to look at three weeks ago and what’s the deadline for getting back to him? Who else is reviewing this document and what are their comments? In all likelihood, the answers to these questions are buried at the bottom of some nightmarish pile of…email.
Approver.com fixes all that by letting you create or upload documents on a web site that you can share with friends or co-workers. You get alerts when interesting events in the lifetime of a document take place, and you can monitor your document queue using simple, sanitary RSS.
You can try Approver.com now for free or take our guided tour. If you’re already using Approver.com, click here to view your documents.
December 8, 2006 at 1:58 am |
[...] We had a great turn out thanks to blogger and global web strategist Jeremiah Owyang who helped us organize this event and invite these new companies. Among the guests were Box.net an online storage company, Joyent an “Office 2.0” company, Zooomer an online photo company, Bepo.com an online photo/video/social sharing company that also owns Birthday alarm an online greeting card company, LifeMoxie online career mentoring services, Approver an online document management company, NING a provider of web apps to create custom social websites, and ArcScale an HDS partner who focuses on Web 2.0 companies like Facebook. We also had Mark Mckeay a writer, thought leader and blogger on data security. This was a very interesting evening, with a lot of new ideas, interesting individuals, and great conversation. [...]