Use these recommended tools to maximize collaboration with colleagues regardless of location
The following collaboration tools are recommended for those who do not work with High Risk Data.
If you work with and share High Risk Data as part of your job, view the recommended tools for High Risk Data.
Use Stanford Slack as your go-to instant messaging tool to communicate with university faculty, students, and staff.
Share files and collaborate on projects using Google Team Drive.
Hold productive video conferences with Zoom, which provides the best video conference experience at Stanford.
Use your computer or mobile device as your Stanford telephone by using Jabber softphone.
Below are some best practices and things to consider about the recommended collaboration tools. Stay tuned as more content is added. If you need help or have questions, submit a Help ticket.
Team Drive allows you to share individual files with people and groups outside your team, but it does not allow you to share folders located on the Team Drive with people outside your team. Best practice suggests creating a separate Team Drive for each distinct group of users needing access to different files. For example, you could create a Team Drive for the Finance team and a Team Drive for the Leadership team.
You cannot prevent members of the Team Drive from viewing files and folders within the Team Drive. Best practice is to create a separate Team Drive for each distinct group of users you need to share files and folders with.
Google Team Drive is Stanford's recommended file sharing tool. An important exception is if you work with Personal Health Information (PHI), in which case you should use Medicine Box.
If you have a small number of files to move, you can drag and drop them into Team Drive using a recent version of Chrome. If you have a large number of files, install Google File Stream, then drag the files to the File Stream Team Drive folder. Allow the computer to sit on the network while it uploads your files to Team Drive.
You cannot move chat conversations from Jabber to Slack. The good news is that your Jabber chats will not go away and will be available for reference in Jabber if needed.
You may use Slack as long as your conversation does not involve High Risk data and/or Personal Health Information (PHI). Jabber is the only approved instant messaging tool for High Risk Data and PHI.
Stanford Healthcare (SHC) and Stanford Children's Hospital (SCH) are not part of the Stanford Slack Grid. People at SHC and SCH need to be invited as guests to join one or more channels if you want to message them via Slack.
While WebEx continues to be available, Zoom is the university-recommended tool and offers the best video conferencing experience at Stanford.