We used to be able to drag and drop the parent stories in the storyboard, but as of last week they are all stuck in place. I submitted a support ticket and they said the development team is working on a resolution.
Thanks, Andy! We currently use New, In Development, Proofing, QA/Testing, and Complete. But as our team evolves, so does the board. Our general rule has been to try to keep it to no more than 5 columns though.
Yep, I'm with you! Our whole team is complaining about it now. Because of the need to be mobile, most of us work on 13"-15" laptops, so we can only see the project column plus one status column. We have to zoom out to 50% to see all the columns, but then we can't read the cards. And because the head...
Hi Nicole - The author role allows the user to edit the proofing workflow (stages, deadlines, etc) and add new versions of a proof (Configuring Default Proofing Roles). The moderator role allows the user to add new reviewers via comment tagging, but they cannot amend the workflow unless they are als...
Hi Yolanda,Unfortunately, I haven't found a way to do this in Workfront. But it's pretty simple in Proof HQ. You can setup a custom view and filter by My Recipient Role. Go to: https://[yourcompany].my.workfront.com/proof/views/newView [If that doesn't work, click on Proofing from the main menu opt...
Hi Pavlin, You are not able to add a project to multiple programs. But you could consider using the new Typeahead field on a custom form to add programs to a project via project details. Then you would be able to report against any project that contains a specific program within the project details....
For proofs in which we do not want our requestors to see our internal communication, we set the stages to Private. You can do this in the Proof Details (see attached screen shot). Unfortunately, it does not prevent them from opening the proof, but it at least prevents them from seeing all of the com...
They are somewhat random - every time you refresh, the colors change. However, what stays consistent is that tasks associated with the same project should all be the same color. Tina Craig Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company