2009.11.29

Marketcircle’s Daylite: the great tool to be

If it wasn’t for 30 day trial periods of software applications, I wouldn’t have tested out and bought many of the applications I’ve come to depend upon. Similarly, I would have wasted a lot of money on applications that don’t live up to my expectations. In the case of Marketcircle‘s Daylite Productivity Suite (Mac only), I’ve discovered that some applications are on the verge of amazingness and yet their current capabilities are overshadowed by their challenges. This makes it easy to decide if it’s time to hand over $229 for the core application and another $60 for the iPhone app.

To be clear, I love Daylite. It really is on the verge of being something incredible. As my teachers used to say of me to my parents, Daylite “has a lot of potential”. For the time being, it’s a decent tool for integrating projects, calendars, contacts and communications.

SUPPORT

Marketcircle’s support has been quite responsive. I’ve thrown a lot at them and they’ve been good about registering bugs and feature requests and have done their best to address outstanding issues. Unfortunately, some issues aren’t easily resolved. Read on…

SYNCHRONIZATION

If I had to pick a single deal breaker, it’s that synchronization between Daylite and other programs such as iCal and Address Book is spotty at best and failures cause Daylite to crash several times a week. Every time the application crashes, I’ve allowed Daylite to send email to the mothership for review and each time a different support tech sends me the same set of canned instructions. While the steps are clearly defined, they require some time investment to implement and then more time for Daylite to reset the entire sync. This can tie you up for quite a while if you have a large database. Oh, and the sync reset doesn’t always work.

EXTRANEOUS STEPS

Daylite includes a hook into Mail so you can associate all communications with contact records. This makes it easy to create an audit trail of communications — particularly important for project management and managing your wife’s medical calendar and communications relating to her cancer diagnosis and treatment. The problem is that categorizing the emails is a multi-step process when it should be a single click. That is, to categorize the email and then store it in a mail folder you must first select the email, make the contact selection, make the category selection, then click on a separate email, click back on the original email, then drag the original email to the desired mail folder. It may not seem like much, but try managing an active inbox and following those steps tens if not hundreds of times a day. Marketcircle has acknowledged this and opened a feature request.

USER EXPERIENCE

One of the great features of Daylite is the iPhone app, Daylite Touch. It makes it easy to manage your integrated projects, contacts and calendars while away from your computer. Unfortunately, Daylite has deviated from the familiar iPhone interface in a number of components which impacts the user experience. For example, the Daylite Touch contact list interface has no index along the side and no way to easily navigate all contacts the way the native Contact app does. Also, the interface for adding appointments and tasks uses the arrow button typically associated with replying or forwarding emails instead of the plus sign associated with adding new records. Marketcircle has acknowledged these and opened feature requests.

I’ve also suggested that they allow the user to associate default email and calendar categories with contact records, rather than defaulting to the last used category. If you’re not careful, a client record could get associated with your wife’s cancer calendar . Marketcircle has acknowledged this and opened a feature request.

Which brings me to another feature request. Once you’ve associated an email message with a contact and category in Daylite, the Daylite sidepanel in Mail changes to a button for opening the current mail record in Daylite. I’ve suggested it would be handy to see a summary list of associated contacts, communications records and appointments. Marketcircle has acknowledged this and opened a feature request.

MISSING FUNCTIONALITY

This one I haven’t sent to Marketcircle, yet. Daylite Touch doesn’t offer the ability to set reminders for appointments or tasks. You can create the records but you don’t have the ability to set an alert so you don’t forget.

CONSISTENT LANGUAGE

Finally — for now — the language used for status is inconsistent. Daylite’s calendar includes status options such as tentative, confirmed, completed and postponed while the task area has status options open, pending, deferred and done. Marketcircle has acknowledged this and opened a feature request to change it.

Sadly, my trial period expires in seven days. I wish the product were closer to being perfect so I could justify the expense particularly since I’ve invested so much time and have come to depend on Daylite to integrate Andrea’s medical calendar with related communications, reports and records (of course, that’s what trial periods are for). Instead, I’ll have to let the trial lapse and hope the best for Daylite.

2009.11.11

Three mission critical tools

I’ve managed and worked on many projects in my career, some with budgets well into the millions of dollars. With each project, I’ve learned new skills and adopted new tools and tricks for communication, decision making, scheduling and assessment. Never before have I worked on a project on which the health or life of an individual was dependent. Never before has communication, decision making, scheduling and assessment been so critical and the information surrounding the project been so important (and so new to me).

I refer to helping Andrea become a breast cancer survivor as a project for several reasons. First, I recognize there’s a process to follow to achieve success, that we will achieve success in a finite amount of time (a year or less) and there will be a celebratory bash when we wrap-up. Second, I’ve taken on the role of primary support for Andrea which means I’ve taken responsibility for scheduling appointments, acting as the central contact for all communications and coordinating our support network. Finally, it’s a way to draw on my professional skills, learn new skills and exploit the situation as an opportunity to relate what I’m doing for the benefit of the world at large.

Besides Andrea and our two daughters, there are many people or groups that I need to interact with:

  • family
  • friends
  • support network
  • clients (of my business)
  • family physician
  • surgeon
  • radiation oncologist
  • medical oncologist
  • social worker
  • insurance adjudicator
  • energy workers
  • naturopath
  • researcher
  • lawyer

That’s a lot of very important relationships involving a lot of phone calls, correspondence, appointments and information exchange.

Let me tell you about the three mission critical tools I’m using and you should consider.

1) Livescribe Pulse Smartpen

I’ve been a committed user of my Livescribe pen since I bought it last December (thank you Whitney Hoffman for the introduction). I believe it represents the best money I’ve ever spent on any technology, ever, and feel that it heralds the beginning of paper-based computing. I’m particularly attached to this technology right now because it allows me to simultaneously capture both physical and digital copies of my notes (multiple copies in multiple modes is important so I can be sure I have a copy, somewhere). I’ve also recorded a few conversations when I was most concerned about retaining critical and new information.

The Livescribe pen is my workhorse and trusted ally through this process because I can use it anywhere, particularly situations where it would be physically and socially awkward to open my laptop or tap away on my iPhone.

Note that the Livescribe is compatible with both Mac and PC systems.

2) Aurex Business Ring Binder/Portfolio

It’s one of those things I bought and used in a haphazard way many years ago and, when I was done with it, threw it in a cupboard because I couldn’t bring myself to throw away something that was in great condition and may one day be useful.

Ta da!

I like this portfolio more than the binder many people recommended I use because it has a zipper — I’m able to close it and know that I won’t lose any papers.

I’ve divided the binder into 10 sections: Reports, Notes, Community Care Organizations, Receipts/Statements, Medications/Instructions, Research, Directions/print-outs/miscellaneous, Insurance, Resources, Loose notes/prescriptions/receipts (which is a folder I can throw loose papers into). All of these sections hold the pieces of paper that are very important to us.

There are two types of paper in this binder: the pieces that I’ve just collected and need to be scanned for electronic backup, and the pieces that I’ve already scanned for electronic backup. Having hardcopy/electronic duplicates is just as important as being organized and mobile.

My only mistake with this portfolio is that I used a fancy gold marker to label the exterior. The ink didn’t really adhere to the portfolio and it made a huge mess of gold that got on my hands and other things when I handled it. It’s mostly dry and messy now.

Note that binders and portfolios are compatible with all environments.

3) Daylite Productivity Suite

This is the newest piece of technology in my toolkit and one that I both love and get frustrated by (partly because I’m still learning it and partly because there are a lot of things that could work better or important features it needs).

Daylite allows me to organize all of my electronic correspondence, notes, appointments, projects and tasks so I can manage and monitor everything more carefully. A particularly important feature is linking which allows me to create relationships between people and activities, making it easier to find and follow progress. It’s particularly handy because I’m able to also use it for work and family activities, meaning I don’t need to run additional tools. Daylite also syncs with Address Book and iCal (this is one of the areas that needs improvement) and there’s an iPhone app which allows me to use the power of Daylite when I’m on the go.

Daylite isn’t cheap and I’m not looking forward to having to pay so much for the Productivity Suite and the iPhone app when my trial period runs out. Having said that, I can honestly say that Daylite isn’t a cute piece of software, it’s a mission critical management tool that knocks the socks off Outlook and any project management software I’ve ever used.

Daylite Productivity Suite is only available for Mac computers.

Wow!

Okay… this post is getting long and I need to get ready for the day. I’ll try to make time this week to share more detail on how I use these tools.

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