Free, Web Based Project Management with CreativePro Office

24755 users, 26668 projects, $116,812,693.90 invoiced

A Big Thanks to the Early Adopters

By Jeff Apr 20, 2007

It's been a busy week here at UpStart Productions.  On Tuesday, 2 of my apps were submitted toBuzzshout logo Buzzshout and traffic has spiked for most of the week.  It's dramatically tapering off now as I suspected.  CreativePro Office saw more than 50 new registered users which isn't much for the likes of Digg but for CPO, it's downright dramatic.

Everyone has been very cool and very patient.  The feedback has generally been positive and critiques have been constructive.  So, thanks a lot, guys!  I appreciate your willingness to give CPO a shot - even just to kick the tires.

Special thanks to Pali over at AfterThe.net .  After giving CPO a fine review on Buzzshout, he raved about it some more in this post .  Thanks a million, Pali!After The Dot Net logo

Anyone who registered can see there's plenty of work yet to be done.  However, the feedback so far tells me that, fundamentally, CPO is on the right track.  It's lacking some features right now and there are bugs, but it's easy to set up and begin using immediately and folks seem to like that.  

Thanks for reading.

Jeff 

5

CreativePro Office and Omnidrive

By Jeff Mar 14, 2007

CreativePro Office has a nice feature that lets you upload files to individual projects and then make certain files visible to your clients. For example, you've just finished 2 Photoshop comps of a brochure for a client. Upload them to the project, make them public and your client can now view the files and comment on them in their client area.

The problem is that this feature is not scaleable right now. CPO currently exists on a shared hosting platform andOmnidrive online storage without venture funding or a solid revenue model, this is the ways it's gonna be for the near future.

For the past few weeks I've been looking around for an online file storage service to integrate with CreativePro Office.  I first looked at Box.net because they are integrated with both Pageflakes and Netvibes .  Box.net provides 1GB with their free plan and they have great API documentation.  However, the API requires that you login to your account at the Box.net website.  That won't work.

Then I found Omnidrive .  They also offer a 1GB free account and their API can be accessed from within CPO - users are authenticated through a REST call.  The only problem I've run into so far is their API docs - they're terrible.  But I'm making some progress and once I get a working prototype, I'll release the PHP API code in a blog post.

Thanks for reading.

Jeff 

I Wanna Be GoPlan! (or do I?)

By Jeff Mar 8, 2007

If you've been following the GoPlan Blog for the past few months, you'll know they've been able to generate quite someGoPlan Project Management buzz with an invitation only release a few months back. Well, GoPlan is now available to the masses - I signed up for the free account last night. It is impressive and kudos to the guys at WeBreakStuff.com for producing a nice app!

If you don't know, GoPlan is an online project management suite with some nice collaboration features built in. From the GoPlan blog...

 

Goplan is an online project management solution. It allows teams and individuals to collaborate through tasks, file management, real-time chat, online calendaring, and many other features.

Ok, I created my account and I logged in and was immediately infatuated with the eye candy. GoPlan looks great. It's got an intuitive layout, pretty icons and a soothing color scheme - maybe a bit like Blinksale . Now I realize look and feel is very subjective. 37 Signals and their Basecamp product have the whole "simple is genious" thing going on and that's fine. But frankly, I'm a bit shallow. When I'm using an app for an hour or more, I want it to be pretty. Ok, enough said about that.

So yeah, I wanna be GoPlan - I want CreativePro Office to be just as pretty and just as simple to use. But playing with GoPlan for awhile brought me back to just why I built CPO in the first place. For example, GoPlan has no invoicing feature - yet. It has no expense tracking feature - yet. It has no timesheet feature - yet. I say 'yet' because GoPlan is very much in an early release stage and the team may add these features later. Or they may stick with the core feature set they have now and that's great and it will work stunningly for a lot of users.

But my vision for CPO has always been a complete end-to-end solution for the single developer or very small (2-5 people) development team or the single developer with 2 or 3 subcontractors, etc. By end-to-end I mean from drafting an estimate to sending the invoices - every stage of the project life-cycle is handled by one app. Back in the day, I used to get really tired of creating estimates and quote in a Word template, then tracking my hours online, using Outlook as my default task manager (you know what I mean), and then creating invoices with an Excel file. Things are much better these days and apps like GoPlan do a lot of the heavy lifting. But I still need to access 3 or more apps to get everything done.

For now, I'm sticking with the end-to-end approach with CreativePro Office and we'll see how it works out. Maybe it's just too darn complicated to pull off well.

Thanks for reading.

Jeff