Team Collaboration: "Permissioned Custom Views" Use-Case?
- Use Case:
1. I am running a User Acceptance Test project. I need to store all Test Cases/Test Case Information in a 'Master Sheet' that is permissioned at a 'Project Administrator' level. At the "Administrator Level" all test case records would be created and administered within this single ‘master sheet’.
- 2. With #1 as the starting point, I need to create customized views – akin to creating a custom filter – where I can select specific rows and columns, then save this selection set as a ‘fixed custom view’.
- 3. From #2, I need to be able to apply collaborator permissions so that Collaborators with permissions for each view, see ONLY that view when logging into the 'view' link provided by the Administrator.
- 4. From #3, Collaborators can view, edit, update, & save the items in their ‘permissioned view’* only.
- Using multiple different views from a common ‘master sheet’, users with Administrator permissions can use a single worksheet as the source of truth and single source of data administration while allowing multiple collaborators to see and update ‘only their data’.
*Assuming the basis of the model outlined above can be implemented, then to account for instances where row & column data might be common across two or more differently-permissioned views, the Administrator could take steps to allow for ‘different teams differently updating common records at the ‘master sheet’ level. |
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While SmartSheet ordinarily accommodates this type of change, for the model described above if it would help keep initial implementations simpler, the following method could be used: |
1. where row & column data is identified as having common records, then the Master Sheet Administrator would replicate each record set for each separately permissioned view. |
2. In this way, records that would otherwise be ‘single sets’ in the Master Sheet view will be allowed to proliferate ‘by custom view’ to accommodate for ‘per custom view differences’. The Administrator could tag records or data sets ‘by custom view name’ or ‘permissioned team’ to track results across these replicated records in the Master Sheet view. |
3. Downside: This approach may create additional overhead when Administering and reporting against these ‘multiples’ from the Master Sheet level Upside: The Administrator could leverage these data elements to identify key differences ‘By View’, ‘By Permissioned Users’, or other criteria. These could then be exploited/communicated in BI report visualizations, dashboards, and could even influence end-state design changes from User Testing Use-Case. |