Wrike, Inc

1600 Villa St, Suite 168

Mountain View, CA, 94041

www.wrike.com

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Valerie Sinitskaya

Daria Petrova

Wrike Integrates Wiki into Project Management Software

Palo Alto, California -- (September, 3) – Wrike, Inc. – the leading provider of on-demand project management software – added wiki capabilities to its project management solution by releasing a revision history feature with its Premium subscription.

Wrike is a collaborative project management solution that lets project teams build plans from the bottom up, thus making organizations more productive and agile. Combined with Wrike’s existing features, the release of the task revision history feature turns Wrike into a handy wiki with full-fledged project management functionality. Now Wrike users can benefit from the wiki’s most important features: collaborative editing, e-mail notifications about the changes, version control and links between tasks.

Tasks in Wrike can be treated as a wiki pages. One person can create a task, another person can correct its description, the third person can cross-link it with another task, and so forth. As a result, you get a piece of knowledge that reflects a common view of the participants on the subject. The bottom-up process of creating content from people with no central control is also known as emergent structures. In the same way, teams can interact about the project plan and update it when necessary. The bottom-up approach implies proactive team input into the project-executing process. Combined, the top-down and bottom-up approaches to project management allow companies to unite control and collaboration.

Companies that use separate tools for knowledge sharing, content creation, project management and collaboration will benefit from Wrike’s revision history release. Having a wiki and project management capabilities in one tool is a money-saving solution and a great productivity gain. Teams can easily access the up-to-date project information, contribute to the project plan and work on the shared documents in one place. Wrike has a built-in text editor, so there is no need for users to remember wiki syntax, which is rather complicated. A wiki integrated into a project management tool is also a money-saving solution.

“Wiki features organically fit into the overall Wrike experience and help us better meet users’ needs. Wrike users get a true project management 2.0 experience, thanks to collaboration brought into the planning process,” said Andrew Filev, CEO of Wrike. Wrike allows everyone on the team to immediately see the latest updates and contribute to the project plan in real time. Meanwhile, the ability to restore tasks to the previous version at any time allows project managers to keep control firmly in their hands.

About Wrike:

Wrike (http://www.wrike.com) is the leading on-demand, online project management solution. It provides executives with a unique platform for managing many projects in one workspace and easily getting reports across all projects. Wrike’s collaboration features give a significant productivity gain to a variety of small and midsize companies around the world (http://www.wrike.com/stories.jsp). Its e-mail integration is the most advanced in the project management space. Wrike, Inc. has patents pending. Founded in 2003, Wrike Inc. is a privately held corporation located in California.