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Review: Wrike (web-based project management tool)

23 December 2010 by Nathalie Abejero 6 Comments

The context of this review is at the end of this post. Other useful reviews I’ve found, some which echo a few points below, are here (reviewed against LiquidPlanner, 2010), here (reviewed against BaseCamp, 2007), here (comments from 2009), and here (2007).

My main complaint is the inconsistency problem in user experience: between users, within each user’s experience in using the same function, and then our team’s experience conflicts directly with what Wrike says its platform can do. What could this be from? The caching? The firewalls? We already all use the same version of Chrome.

Basic functionalities I expect from a project management platform:

1. Buffering between dependencies is unreliable – sometimes the buffer periods stick, but most of the time they don’t – and you don’t know it until you open those tasks again and see that your timeline has completely shifted. Wrike’s response as of Nov 2010: Wrike dependencies don’t support creating a time-delay between tasks.

2. Viewing your tasks in the timeline –

  • There’s no differentiation between types of tasks (eg meeting, action, appointment) or group levels (eg Output level vs subfolders like Province or Facility) in timeline – The headings have no color coding or font effects etc, making viewing it a bit of an eyeache.
  • The timeline view does not allow user-determined ordering of tasks and folders. I put the folder for Output 1 at the top for a reason, followed by the folders for Output 2, 3, etc. But Wrike’s timeline limits how these folders stack to the chronology of tasks within these folders.
  • The details box for each task doesn’t list its full folder path (eg in “Included in” box on details view)

3. Being able to view or export a list of tasks the user has sorted – This to me seems a critical function – You filter, search, sort all tasks by X person in X facility in X province within a specified date range. You want to see all tasks meeting these criteria across all Output folders. You get a list. But this list cannot be displayed online on the timeline nor can it be exported on CSV so I can view it on excel. Wrike’s response as of Dec 2010: Export function does not take search criteria into account.


4. Batch-edits such as selecting many tasks at once and deleting or moving them to another folder is not possible.

5. Recurring tasks – Changes to the original task does not cascade to the recurrences created from it! eg if you edit / delete a task, its recurrences do not reflect the edit – you must edit / delete all 12 or 300 individually. See #4 above – you cannot batch edit! So be careful using this “handy” function!

6. When editing tasks that are placed in two or more folders, the user is not prompted to replicate the adjustment in the other folders as well eg when the edited task’s timeline is adjusted it does not automatically update in the other folders, even though this is the same task in both folders. [Read more…] about Review: Wrike (web-based project management tool)

Filed Under: Work Tagged With: Cambodia, development, foreign aid, GTD, productivity, project management, wrike

scene in Kampong Cham

22 May 2010 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

Here are scenes from a recent trip to visit a colleague in Kampong Cham, Cambodia. For more photos see Keith Kelly’s flickr.

For some reason, the cloud formations around here are really cool, especially during the rainy season. They get big and puffy like the clouds you liked to think were bunnies or pandas or other cuddly creatures in the sky when you were a kid – cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds is what I think we used to call it in 2nd grade. It makes for dramatic sunsets. Except the rainy season has refused to come to SE Asia so far this year, and any gorgeous sunset is completely lost on our poor melting gray cells.

Looking for a great meal? This coconut oil fried fish from the Two Dragons Restaurant near the town center is THE BEST DISH EVER!! I tell you I think there’s crack in this dish, it’s SOOO GOOD and that is all the descriptive narrative I can sputter about this.

And you’ve already seen how people travel around here. I don’t like to sit in the middle or the back of the bus cuz I get motion sickness, but sitting in the front and watching these trucks piled high with people swerving in and out of the traffic makes me nervous. Yeyy for iPods. It’s also a good thing that all manner of pirated angry music is available in Cambodia. It’s a good soundtrack for riding the Cambodian highways, to shove aside all empathy for these poor riders in favor of aggressive mental video gaming and point systems.

Filed Under: Travels Tagged With: Cambodia, Kampong Cham

the ice truck

21 May 2010 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

Check this out. This is how ice is transported around Cambodia. Blocks of it are stacked on the back of a truck, then covered by rice husks and a tarp. The truck drives a set route and small sections are sawed off as each vendor flags down this truck to buy ice from them. One big block is about 7000 Riel or $1.75. It lasts the whole day for a small vendor like the ones selling sugar cane juice. More photos on Keith Kelly’s flickr.

This is ice being transported within the city. The horses are tiny, even for someone short like me!

Filed Under: Life Tagged With: Cambodia, ice, ice truck

View across the street… danger pay?

16 May 2010 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment


Filed Under: Life Tagged With: Cambodia, construction, scaffolding

ASEAN trade barriers fall, but will political barriers follow?

14 April 2010 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

The new regional free trade agreement across ASEAN-China is off to a strong start:

To date, about 99 percent of tariffs have been removed, with exemptions awarded to rice, tobacco and alcohol, along with scores of other sensitive items. Customs procedures are being harmonized and common standards applied.

The regional economic integration across ASEAN has many observers comparing it to the EU. ASEAN countries have vast disparities developmentally, culturally, economically, and politically. Signatories will be absorbed at staggered dates, with the least developed countries like Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam and Burma to sign on 2015.

Many investors are optimistic about tapping the potential high growth this particular FTA will bring, especially since other regions’ economies are still struggling to recover. What is worrying is the expectation that “international issues such as education, medical research and climate change will be governed increasingly from a trade perspective”.

This bodes not so good for countries like Cambodia..

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: ASEAN, Cambodia, FTA, trade

Chunpo Chnam Thmei! Happy Khmer New Year!

14 April 2010 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

graphic courtesy of House32 and John Weeks.

Filed Under: Life Tagged With: Cambodia, Khmer New Year

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Those little feet pitter-pattering about rule our lives lately. But on the occasional free moment I get to tap out scatterbrained bursts of consciousness about raising toddlers in Cambodia, traveling with them and working abroad. These posts are my personal updates to friends and family. But since you’re here, have a look around. Thanks for stopping by…

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