Igloo: an intranet you’ll actually like by Alison Green on May 9, 2016 And now a break to talk about a sponsor… If your company intranet is little more than the place where documents go to die, you should check out Igloo. Igloo is a totally different experience than the traditional intranet. It’s interactive, really easy to use, and highly customizable. You can use it to have a super simple intranet if that’s your thing, or you can have something quite complex; it’s impressively adaptable. Igloo will pull together team calendars, project information, working documents, wikis (which you might use for SOPs, manuals, etc.), task management, document collaboration, and real-time updates from all your teams. You can also use it for secure file-sharing (like a secure version of Dropbox). And it even has a Twitter-like internal micro-blogging system, if you want to give people the chance to share quick thoughts across the company. And in particular, if you’re in HR or have the ear of HR, a modern intranet like Igloo can help centralize a hub of self-service information, corporate communications, and employee forums. It also looks good and works well on mobile phones, so you can actually use it when you’re on the road. Plus, you can set it up and edit it with incredible ease. You won’t need to send every change through your I.T. department; even if you’re not very tech-savvy, you’ll probably be able to configure it yourself. After I wrote about Igloo previously, I received an email from a reader who wrote that her company had been on the verge of signing a contract for intranet services with Sharepoint, which was going to be pricey. She suggested Igloo to the team that was working on the project, and they ended up “thrilled with the product.” Here’s the update she sent me afterwards: “I work closely with those folks (doing the implementation), and they are very happy with our decision to use Igloo. I can also vouch for the fact that our ‘all in’ cost saved us a good bit of money over Sharepoint. Also — I’m going to step on out on a limb and say that future support calls to Igloo, if needed, will be much less frustrating than they would be calling Sharepoint … Our company is quite small (40 or so employees) and the Igloo support team has, I’m told, bent over backwards to assist in our implementation.” Speaking of price, it’s really affordable: It’s $12 per user per month, which is about a quarter of what you’d pay for Sharepoint. And it’s free if you have fewer than 10 users. You can learn more here. Disclosure: This post is sponsored by Igloo. All thoughts and opinions are my own. You may also like:my employee keeps editing my work -- and it feels like a power playcan I do anything about a senior-level colleague who doesn't do any work?coworkers have a mean group chat, company won't tell us who's been laid off, and more { 4 comments }
animaniactoo* May 9, 2016 at 10:56 am Question: Do you know if this is available in regions that have a habit of blocking sites like DropBox? My company works with a number of factories overseas and we had to drop a previous service because one government decided they didn’t like that service anymore and banned access to it. One of the problems with our current setup (Sharepoint/WorkFront (fka AtTask)) is that image previews aren’t available and that would be a great feature to have if everybody can access this service.
Ask a Manager* Post authorMay 9, 2016 at 11:47 am I just checked with them, and they’re not aware of any legal bans. They say: “The only issue we’ve had was if employees were using Google Translate to read our website in China, but that’s a fringe case. There might, however, be some issues around business laws and storing data related to the business is a different country but that’s not platform specific.”
animaniactoo* May 9, 2016 at 1:36 pm Great, thanks for checking (and yes, China is the main culprit).
Lizabeth* May 9, 2016 at 11:57 am After hitting massive home runs with the Mother’s Day flowers from Bouqs, I will bookmark this one for future reference! Woot!