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by 1as
2484 days ago
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(I work at Consider) Two main things I'd call out. First, it's easy to find history. With a Consider group, you can see all of the history of all groups you're in, right there in the email client. So – a new engineer, say, on their first day in the company, can browse engineering@. (And they can see all the conversations the team have pinned there, almost like a super lightweight wiki.) Second, it's easy to browse groups you're _not_ a member of. So, that engineer can stop by design@, and take a sneak peak of what the design team are working on now and then, without having their inbox fill up with stuff they're not interested in. Some companies (notably Stripe) have built cool internal tools to approximate these benefits on top of Gmail and Google Groups. With Consider + Groups, you get everything combined in one place by default. |
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