|
An overview of Kerika
|
Sharing Projects
|
|
A typical Idea Page, with documents, Web links, Sticky Notes and workflow: this example shows Kerika being used for a Scrum project.
|
You can share projects with anyone – even people who don't use Kerika – just by adding their
email addresses to the project's team list.
|
| |
|
Attaching Notes to Items
|
Sharing Across Projects
|
|
Team members can attach Notes to anything on any page: a document (as in this example), a picture, a Web link, a project, whatever...
|
You can use the same item in two different projects: a document, picture, Web link, or a whole sub-project or process flow
that's common to several projects.
|
| |
|
Manage Documents
|
Trash (Recycle Bin)
|
|
Kerika automatically files all the different versions that exist for a document: old backups you may have made, the current version you are
working on, and versions that were changed by your team mates.
|
Anyone on a project team can delete any item from any Idea Page, and any other team member can restore it: think of Kerika as a
graphical wiki .
|
| |
|
Send project updates by email
|
Have Conversations
|
|
Any team members who don't use Kerika can get their project updates sent (automatically!) by email instead.
|
Send instant messages to your online team members.
|
| |
|
Business Plan Example
|
Marketing Plan Example
|
|
An example of using Kerika to write a business plan.
|
An example of using Kerika to create a marketing plan.
|
| |
|
Competitive Strategy Example
|
Balanced Scorecard Example
|
|
An example of using Kerika to develop competitive strategy, using Michael Porter's conceptual framework.
|
An example of using Kerika for Balanced Scorecard analysis for organizations and products.
|
|
Product Management Example
|
|
An example of using Kerika for product management.
|