

In the past, I’ve proposed new ideas to the team in docs, and also composed pricing strategies for our new product line, right inside Dropbox.įor the full product process, I’ll create a document that holds our user research, embedded InVision presentations and also a to do list to make sure I’m in check with what needs to be done. Not only is Paper used for feedback and job management, but I often use Paper for free-thinking on product features or idea generation. Kate Williams, Graphic Designer KEW DesignĪs you can see, I create a lot of documents I can gather a team of designers and developers to organise a project checklist, features such as the embed support for InVision, Figma and Sketch allow for an efficient workflow, making it a first-class collaboration tool. I frequently use Dropbox Paper with my clients. Once I’ve absorbed the feedback in micro to-dos, I head back to my desk and flesh out the document with more in-depth points to aid the design process. The to-do checkboxes allow me to quickly note at a high level what it is I need to achieve from each project. Paper is the first thing I open on my laptop when heading into a meeting, whether at ideation or feedback stage. To write this article! Alongside preparing articles, I have a host of professional and personal uses for the product.

From being able to find the documents I’m looking for, to sharing and contributing to ideas as a team, I’ve found the simplicity has offered more than more traditional processors ever have. I’ve been using Dropbox Paper almost exclusively now for up to a year, both in a personal and professional sense, and my efficiency has improved no end. The integrations with third party services only cement the tool further into our routines. Dropbox’s integration with our existing workflows, through file storage, meant that it was a natural progression for us to bring our text-based thoughts to the page inside an ecosystem we were familiar with.
