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Tech Tips for Hotlines II

by Kari Deming

Happy Winter, Everyone!  Last quarter, we discussed positively interfacing with clients via LucyPhone, telephone technology, and email.  As December wanes and the New Year approaches, we offer these simple tips to enhance interactions between program people – partners, staff and volunteers.  As I am quite enamored with all-things-Google, this segment includes only Google-based tools.

1.  Collective Calendaring

All litigation offices have calendaring or tickling systems to control their dockets, and some use an office-wide in/out calendar or white board to keep track of staff.  Most hotlines also tickle cases not completed during the initial call.  Our staffing, however, is often much more complicated than that of a traditional law office, including an ever-changing contingent of  full- and part-time lawyers, paralegals, advocates, volunteers, interns, externs, work study students, and more.  In such an environment, an online, unified, personnel-centered calendar is something close to a miracle.

In my program, we use Google Calendar to, among other things:

As an example, a quick glance at a recent CALL calendar day told us that:

All personnel are expected to faithfully enter their schedule changes and events into the calendar and to review the team calendar daily.  Doing so makes us more responsible about finding replacements if we need to be out, shows  which supervisors are available for questions or emergency referrals,  helps us know where to land (we all have “regular” spaces, but we have more part-time players than work stations), etc.  It is not an overstatement to say we live and die by that calendar!

A good step-by-step guide to collective calendar set up is available here.

2.  Productive Chatting

While texting and social media are an ever-present potential distraction, online chatting can be a highly efficient method of communication.  At CALL, our attorneys and supervisors regularly use Google Chat to:

3.  Productive Chatting + !

Google Hangouts are a bit like Google Chats + Google Voice, on steroids.  With Hangouts, you can:

There are a number of tutorials out there, including Google’s own, but I found this one very easy to follow.  There’s also great stuff to glean here and here.

4.  Collaborative writing

Last but not least, consider using Google Drive (which recently ate Google Docs) to share and collectively edit documents “in the cloud.”  Virtually every new written piece that I produce (including this article!) starts as a Google Drive document (who needs Word?), presentation (so long, PowerPoint), spreadsheet (goodbye, Excel) or form.  Thanks to this tool, I don’t worry that I’m working on the wrong version of a document because it continuously saves and allows multiple users to draft and edit simultaneously.  Happily, it also keeps track of all changes made, and who they were made by, such that you can retrieve that bit of perfect writing that someone else didn’t like.  In addition, I can access and work on my Drive materials from anywhere – my office PC, my home iPad, my car Kindle, or even my phone.  No more slogging through a weekend snowstorm to grab the datastick containing my homework…

Even better, you can do — really — so very much more (and so much more than I’ve yet learned how to do).  For example, with Google Drive you can:

You can also install an ever-increasing number of apps and extensions to allow greater functionality.  For example, you can:

PCWorld offers a nice review of some of the above apps here.

Finally, lifehacker.com offers the following:

Google Tips is available here.

Wishing you a New Year filled with peace, joy, patience and productivity!

“This is your life, and it’s ending one minute at the time.” – Fight Club

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