When a team works in the same office, information flows informally — questions answered in the hallway, decisions made at the whiteboard. Remote teams lose this ambient communication, and the result is often misalignment, duplicated effort, and "wait, when did we decide that?"
Collaborative note taking solves this by creating a shared record of what matters: decisions, tasks, priorities, and context.
Collaborative notes aren't just shared documents. They're living records that multiple people can update in real time, with tasks attached to specific owners and due dates that create accountability.
With NoteWithMe, a team project is a shared space where:
Instead of a 30-minute video call, create a shared "Daily Standup" project. Each team member adds:
This happens asynchronously, takes 3 minutes per person, and creates a written record.
After every call, create tasks in NoteWithMe:
This single habit reduces follow-up meetings by half.
Keep a project's goals, milestones, and priorities visible to the whole team. When priorities shift (they always do), update the project notes. Everyone sees the same picture.
For agencies, create one project per client. All deliverables, deadlines, and communication notes live there. Client handoffs become simple because the context is documented.
Instead of spending days in back-to-back calls explaining "how we work here," point new hires to the team's NoteWithMe projects. The notes and tasks are the institutional knowledge.
Click New Project and give it a clear, specific name. "Q2 Marketing Campaign" not "Marketing."
Click the Share icon. Enter your teammate's email and choose their role:
Agree on how your team will use the tool:
[URGENT] prefix for tasks needing same-day attentionFor deadline-driven tasks, configure NoteWithMe to send reminders via email, Discord, or Telegram in Settings → Notifications.
Mistake: Multiple overlapping tools
If decisions happen in Slack, tasks in Asana, and notes in Notion, no one knows where to look.
Mistake: Tasks without owners
"The team should review this" means no one will. Every task needs exactly one owner.
Mistake: Not reviewing or updating notes
A note that hasn't been updated in two weeks is probably wrong. Schedule weekly project reviews.