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The what's what of the Flowdock atmosphere.

Blog Archives

Track Your Brand With Flowdock

January 11th, 2012

Mikael Roos

Flowdock is an excellent tool for following your brand on the web with your team. Here’s a quick guide to cover the major steps to get your team in touch with your brand.

1. React To Tweets as a Team

First and foremost, you should track whenever someone mentions your brand on Twitter. We use it for example to detect if someone is asking something about us, even when they’re not directly reaching out to us.

Tweet

This way we can reply quickly, or have an internal chat about the topic.

Secondly, you can follow the Twitter account of your own brand, just to keep up-to-date about when someone from your team has Tweeted something.

Team Inbox Twitter Settings

To set these up, head on to Team Inbox settings, type in your brand, and click to follow the keyword, type it again, and click to follow the user. You can even filter out any replies and retweets if you like.

2. Subscribe to Google Alerts

Another great way to stay updated about what people are writing about your brand on the web, is using Google Alerts with Flowdock.

To set Google Alerts up with your Flowdock flow, follow these instructions:

  1. Get the email address of your flow (you can find it in Team Inbox settings)
  2. Go to google.com/alerts
  3. IMPORTANT STEP: If you’ve logged in to google, log out! Google lets you choose a custom e-mail address for the alerts only if you’re not logged in
  4. Fill in the form: It’s best to start with “All results” and then change it if you’re getting too many results. Google Alerts Form
  5. Click Submit
  6. A confirmation e-mail should pop up in Team Inbox. Verify the email address by clicking the link in the message. Google Alerts Confirm

You’re all set and receiving Google Alert notifications. Now you won’t miss what the public is saying about your product or service.

3. Feedback Should Flow To Your Flow

Feedback is super important for any endeavor. Flowdock is a great place to funnel into all feedback. There are 3 great ways to channel feedback to Flowdock.

  1. Automatically forward your feedback emails
    If you have a feedback email address (like feedback@yourcompany.com), make sure that all e-mail sent to it, gets also sent to your Flowdock flow. How this can be done depends on your email service provider. If you’re using Google Apps, check out these instructions (section “To add new members”).
  2. Feedback forms
    We use a simple feedback form right within the app from which the feedback is sent to our Flowdock flow. To make this happen, it’s often easiest to use any e-mail capable feedback form to send the feedback to your flow. You can pre-tag the feedback either by using a #hashtag in the subject line or by modifying the e-mail address of the flow in the following way: let’s say your Flowdock subdomain is “company”, the name of your flow is “main” and you want feedback to get tagged with the #feedback tag, you can use the e-mail address main+feedback@company.flowdock.com. If you want to code something yourself, or e-mail isn’t a choice, check out the API.
  3. Feedback services (UserVoice, Get Satisfaction etc)
    If you’re using a feedback service of some sort, it’s usually easiest to add a user to that service using the email address of the Flowdock flow as the e-mail address of the account. Then just configure the notification settings of the service to suit your needs. We use this approach to work with our own Uservoice page.

Style Me Pretty with Flowdock

September 7th, 2011

Anni Rautio

Style Me Pretty is a style savvy wedding blog, that loves Flowdock. We talked with the technical lead of the team, Tait Larson, to get a behind-the-scenes look at how Flowdock helps Style Me Pretty operate smoothly.

Launched in 2007, Style Me Pretty is on a mission to bring chic and sophisticated wedding to the masses.

Bringing in over 500.000 visitors and 13 million page views each month, Style Me Pretty has grown leaps and bounds from its beginnings. The team has expanded from Abby and Tait to about 15 people scattered all over the United States.

Tracking Media inside Flowdock

Keeping the blog up and running and staying on top of all social networks requires a fleet of technical and non-technical staff. They are located all over the United States, yet they work seamlessly together, and they work fast.

How? With Flowdock.

“Flowdock is just quicker, cleaner and better than other tools around!”, Tait says.

On any given day, Style Me Pretty needs to follow up on the hottest trends, see what’s new, and keep Style Me Pretty active on all social networks, like Twitter. To ensure their fingers are constantly on the pulse of what’s new & pretty, Style Me Pretty tracks social media and website activity through Flowdock’s real time notifications – keeping both internal and external communication timely.

All team on the same page

The entire Style Me Pretty team uses Flowdock on a daily basis – keeping people in constant commutation and making all tasks that much more efficient. Editors may ask the tech team for advice, and the tech team can keep everyone updated on any issues that might arise.

Flowdock is used as a 101 tech support channel inside the team – everyone always knows who’s online, and status updates tell who’s working on what.

Another key function is the social aspect. “The team is spread across many states, and by chatting in Flowdock, the team members connect and gather around a “virtual water cooler”", adds Tait.

“Since we started with Flowdock, the team has more than doubled in size. Flowdock has helped us avoid communication hiccups as we grow!”

Flowdocking the Uxebu Way

September 2nd, 2011

Anni Rautio

Wolfram KriesingMeet Wolfram Kriesing, Co-Founder of uxebu, a quickly growing JavaScript company.

In their own words, uxebu is not just another web and mobile app developer. Rather, they go head first to tackle mobile challenges of all kinds, from commercial ventures to open source projects.

Uxebu was kicked off in 2008 between 3 guys. Originally from Munich, Germany, the uxebu team has grown into a collection of developers spread across Munich, Amsterdam and Ohio.

To stay on top of their game regardless of timezones, closely-knit teamwork is a must for this agile startup. When it comes to collaboration, uxebu trusts Flowdock’s expertise.

Less email, more conversation

The uxebu team was never a big fan of email. Before entering the world of Flowdock, uxebu relied on Skype and Skype chat. While Flowdock hasn’t eliminated the need for Skype calls, especially with external clients, what has changed is the way the team works together.

In Flowdock, uxebu has created separate flows, or project rooms, for each project they are working on.

“We don’t have all team members working actively on all projects, but still everyone has free access to each project’s information. If I need to follow up on a project in which I don’t have an active role, I can still access the project flow anytime I want to find the update I need”, Wolfram says.

The team discusses the everyday issues and customer updates in a general flow, but project-based flows are all about hard work. Discussion revolves around work-related details, the real techie stuff.

Highlighting the important info

What makes uxebu’s work more efficient, is how they use #tags and @mentions. Working across timezones can create bottlenecks in development and communication, but Flowdock keeps you notified even when you’re asleep.

Wolfram gets highlighted in Flowdock

“When I open Flowdock in the morning, the comments that are important to me get highlighted. Skype just can’t do this!”, says Wolfram. “Skype’s notification was too noisy for me. In Flowdock, I have customized what types of notifications ping me.”

Connecting team members around the clock smooths out the software development process. All work related discussions take place on Flowdock, making it simple for everyone to stay on top of their game.

Designing a Better First-Time UX at Flowdock

July 12th, 2011

Anni Rautio

Using a new product for the first time is not always a bliss. For us at Flowdock the flow has become a way of life. We eat our on dog food, and love it, but sometimes we can get blinded by our own user experience. On the flip side, feedback is another thing we love. We’ve received lots of it, but now we’re hungry for more. First-timers, we need your help! We want the first-time user experience in Flowdock to be as seamless as possible. During this sprint, 90% of our team effort focuses on creating a happier first-time user experience. We call this the FUX.

We aim for a blink-of-an-eye, harmonious FUX-experience by:

  • clearly communicating “what Flowdock really is”, and
  • designing the flow in a way that makes a FUXie say: “this tool is very intuitive and easy to understand”

And all this, in just a blink. If you sign up to Flowdock today, this is how it looks like:

Admittedly, not very clear nor intuitive. We need your advice! Whether you’re a pro or a new-comer on Flowdock, or just want to contribute, let us know how we could improve the FUX -experience.

  1. What instructions were missing the first time you entered your flow?
  2. What was made difficult to understand?
  3. Was it easy to get your team mates on board?
  4. Why would you (or not) recommend Flowdock for other teams to use?

Simply: what would make you say “Flowdock is very easy to use”?

Help us make Flowdock better: you can comment below, or email us at .

Flowdock Launches Public Beta

March 10th, 2010

Mikael Roos

Teamwork needs work. With Flowdock, it’s as simple as having a chat. Flowdock keeps your team organized and up-to-date with no effort. It is a powerful team messenger web app.

The biggest day so far is upon us. We Shipped! Right now anybody can march to www.flowdock.com, click the ‘Sign Up for Beta‘ button and start accelerating their team. The hordes of new users gave us some server trouble and signup is now temporarily disabled.

Public Beta Open

A total of 650 teams from all over the world took part in Private Beta, and we got tons of feedback. Here’s what some have said about Flowdock.

“It’s what Google Wave should have been”

Flowdock Quotes

If you want to see more, just see what people are saying about Flowdock on Twitter.

The Genius

During the past few days we’ve shown some awesome uses for Flowdock. Here’s a quick recap.

Minimalist Meetings

Teamwork needs work. Flowdock attempts to minimize the amount of that work.

TODOs are conversation

These days there’s about a zillion ways to manage TODOs online. With Flowdock, the unique aspect is that you can handle them right in the middle of the conversation.

Agile Development with Flowdock

As an agile software development shop, we test extensively and practice continuous integration.

Handle feedback with Flowdock

How to be as responsive and communicative as possible towards your users.

Track your brands with Flowdock

Make your team act as a single unit in tracking, creating, molding, protecting and generally managing your brand.

Handle feedback with Flowdock

March 3rd, 2010

Mikael Roos

We try to be as responsive and communicative as possible towards our users because they are our future customers (fingers crossed), and they provide incredibly valuable customer feedback.

We try to give our customers enough ways to give us feedback, so they don’t have to sweat it. They can use a feedback form inside Flowdock flows, use our Uservoice page or send us email directly to team@flowdock.com. Some users choose to use Twitter for feedback and they catch our attention by mentioning @flowdock. All this means we need to track different mediums. Luckily enough, Flowdock gives us everything we need, in real time.

Emails and Twitter

Handle feedback from different mediums

In this example from the Tour, you can see how we handle feedback from emails and tweets.

  • Responsiveness comes easily when the whole team can respond to the feedback
  • All feedback form emails have the tag #feedback in their subject, so they get correctly tagged
  • We have forwarded all the emails to team@flowdock.com to our development flow as well, so it’s easy to answer to them and track them in Influx
  • Live, face-to-face feedback we just type into the chat and tag it with the same #feedback tag

With these practices, all the feedback is easily accessible when we need it.

Uservoice

Uservoice changes in Influx

Uservoice is a great way of sourcing and managing ideas and suggestions from the user community. The team gets notified about all changes in Uservoice as well. It’s great to talk over new feature requests inside our flow right away when they’re suggested. Then we tag them further and they become part of our backlog. That is agile.

7 days to Flowdock public beta on March 10th!