Thanks for this post! From your list above, we in EA Philippines use Airtable, Calendly, Google Workspace, Asana, and Slack, and we generally have good experiences with these. I’ve also used Zapier personally before, but we haven’t made much use of it yet for EA Philippines. We should though soon.
Other software EA PH has used: Discord, Webflow, Miro, and Otter.ai
#1: Our 3 student chapters in EA Philippines use Discord for their groups/fellowships, not so much for productivity but for community chatting. Students in the Philippines are more active on Discord than on Slack.
#2: Another honorable mention is Webflow, which we use for EA Philippines’s website. Webflow’s student plan only costs $19/year, and they also have a free plan (if you are okay with hosting your site on a domain ending in” webflow.io″). CEA would probably be happy to provide funding for websites on Squarespace, but Webflow’s student plan is still significantly cheaper and could save your group or CEA some money.
One con about Webflow is it’s a bit harder to use than Squarespace, but there are still free or paid templates that can be used. I think CEA / Catherine Low might have an EA Group website template on Webflow that could be duplicated, though I’m unsure if that’s still available. I have knowledge of UI/UX design and of Webflow, so that’s why I used it. And I wanted the design to be custom versus using Squarespace, which seems harder to fully customize.
#3: For brainstorming / ideation sessions, collaborative meetings, or just making diagrams, you can use the collaborative whiteboard platform Miro. We used this a lot in my previous company, and we’ve used it to make a theory of change diagram for EA Philippines. Miro’s student plan gives you Professional access for 2 years. Google Jamboard is also an alternative, though I prefer Miro.
#4: For transcribing talks or meetings, you can use Otter.ai. We’ve used this before to easily transcribe interviews we’ve done with experts or to create transcripts of past talks EA Philippines has organized. Otter has a free plan, but you can get a free 1-month business trial, and their plans are 50% off for students and teachers.
Free Student Plans for Airtable and Asana
Something not mentioned in your article above is that student groups can get free plans for Airtable and Asana. Airtable for Education gives students free access to Airtable Pro for a maximum of 2 years. Even if Airtable has a free plan, it’s easy to go above the free plan, so we’re thankful one of our student chapter leaders applied for an Airtable pro workspace. So EA Philippines’s Airtable base is in this free Airtable pro workspace now.
Meanwhile, Asana also gives free 6-months of Asana Pro for student groups. EA Philippines and our 3 student chapters have been using this free 6-month trial of Asana for the last 5 months, since the free plan of Asana only allows 15 people, and we wanted easier collaboration between our groups and us. We will soon have to migrate to the EA Hub Asana though, which is going to be a headache. But at least we had a test-run of Asana for 6 months, and now we’re more confident of using ~$200 USD of our grant on it.
Hope this info helps other group leaders, especially other student chapters!
It’s also possible to ask for a fully functional team for free there, but you need at least one paid member account (€220/year) to set up new teams, custom fields, and app integrations like Slack.
Thanks for writing this up, this is extremely useful! One tip: it might be helpful if you say how each tool costed (approx.) so people have a clearer picture on costs.
Roam Research looks really great but shame there’s no free version. Workflowy is a similar tool and free (to a reasonable limit then quite cheap) if people are interested. I use it for note taking and brainstorming, where I find quite useful as you can ‘zoom’ in and out of points quite nicely.
Also, this is maybe for bigger groups but we use Action Network as a CRM which I find to be quite powerful, albeit the UX isn’t the best. It only costs us around $23 up to sending 23,000 emails which is plenty or $10 for up to 3,000. As above, definitely recommend Miro for workshops, engagement and brainstorming.
ClickUp might be a good alternative to Asana, particularly if you want to keep costs low. It’s a project management tool for teams, but also works decently well for me as a personal task list.
It is a relatively young project and not as polished as some others like Asana or TodoIst, but has the advantage that the free plan covers a good range of its features.
Hi! This has been a super great resource for me in the past and I just wanted to check if it’s still active? The airtable link to apply is no longer working for me and is indicating that the link has been deleted.
Thanks for this post! From your list above, we in EA Philippines use Airtable, Calendly, Google Workspace, Asana, and Slack, and we generally have good experiences with these. I’ve also used Zapier personally before, but we haven’t made much use of it yet for EA Philippines. We should though soon.
Other software EA PH has used: Discord, Webflow, Miro, and Otter.ai
#1: Our 3 student chapters in EA Philippines use Discord for their groups/fellowships, not so much for productivity but for community chatting. Students in the Philippines are more active on Discord than on Slack.
#2: Another honorable mention is Webflow, which we use for EA Philippines’s website. Webflow’s student plan only costs $19/year, and they also have a free plan (if you are okay with hosting your site on a domain ending in” webflow.io″). CEA would probably be happy to provide funding for websites on Squarespace, but Webflow’s student plan is still significantly cheaper and could save your group or CEA some money.
One con about Webflow is it’s a bit harder to use than Squarespace, but there are still free or paid templates that can be used. I think CEA / Catherine Low might have an EA Group website template on Webflow that could be duplicated, though I’m unsure if that’s still available. I have knowledge of UI/UX design and of Webflow, so that’s why I used it. And I wanted the design to be custom versus using Squarespace, which seems harder to fully customize.
#3: For brainstorming / ideation sessions, collaborative meetings, or just making diagrams, you can use the collaborative whiteboard platform Miro. We used this a lot in my previous company, and we’ve used it to make a theory of change diagram for EA Philippines. Miro’s student plan gives you Professional access for 2 years. Google Jamboard is also an alternative, though I prefer Miro.
#4: For transcribing talks or meetings, you can use Otter.ai. We’ve used this before to easily transcribe interviews we’ve done with experts or to create transcripts of past talks EA Philippines has organized. Otter has a free plan, but you can get a free 1-month business trial, and their plans are 50% off for students and teachers.
Free Student Plans for Airtable and Asana
Something not mentioned in your article above is that student groups can get free plans for Airtable and Asana. Airtable for Education gives students free access to Airtable Pro for a maximum of 2 years. Even if Airtable has a free plan, it’s easy to go above the free plan, so we’re thankful one of our student chapter leaders applied for an Airtable pro workspace. So EA Philippines’s Airtable base is in this free Airtable pro workspace now.
Meanwhile, Asana also gives free 6-months of Asana Pro for student groups. EA Philippines and our 3 student chapters have been using this free 6-month trial of Asana for the last 5 months, since the free plan of Asana only allows 15 people, and we wanted easier collaboration between our groups and us. We will soon have to migrate to the EA Hub Asana though, which is going to be a headache. But at least we had a test-run of Asana for 6 months, and now we’re more confident of using ~$200 USD of our grant on it.
Hope this info helps other group leaders, especially other student chapters!
re: Using Asana Business at EA Hub Teams.
You can sign up here (I see EA PH already did): https://form.asana.com/?k=TaW0jjMl76tUeY5Ysk_mMw&d=19629948077271
It’s also possible to ask for a fully functional team for free there, but you need at least one paid member account (€220/year) to set up new teams, custom fields, and app integrations like Slack.
Migration is arrangeable with Asana staff (note that some formatting and conversations get lost). Basically need to arrange with me to add my email to your old space, and include it in this form: https://form.jotform.com/asanawebdev/asana-migration-request
Thanks for the great comment and suggestions!
Thanks for writing this up, this is extremely useful! One tip: it might be helpful if you say how each tool costed (approx.) so people have a clearer picture on costs.
Roam Research looks really great but shame there’s no free version. Workflowy is a similar tool and free (to a reasonable limit then quite cheap) if people are interested. I use it for note taking and brainstorming, where I find quite useful as you can ‘zoom’ in and out of points quite nicely.
Also, this is maybe for bigger groups but we use Action Network as a CRM which I find to be quite powerful, albeit the UX isn’t the best. It only costs us around $23 up to sending 23,000 emails which is plenty or $10 for up to 3,000. As above, definitely recommend Miro for workshops, engagement and brainstorming.
Thanks for the feedback! Will add some costs in
Remnote is pretty similar to Roam and also has a free version www.remnote.io
ClickUp might be a good alternative to Asana, particularly if you want to keep costs low. It’s a project management tool for teams, but also works decently well for me as a personal task list.
It is a relatively young project and not as polished as some others like Asana or TodoIst, but has the advantage that the free plan covers a good range of its features.
Hi! This has been a super great resource for me in the past and I just wanted to check if it’s still active? The airtable link to apply is no longer working for me and is indicating that the link has been deleted.
Ah thanks for letting me know. Yup it’s still up here https://handbook.globalchallengesproject.org/services/request-fast-funding