JAE
Structural
- Jun 27, 2000
- 15,460
In yesteryears engineering firms would communicate via telephone or regular "snail" mail.
For telephones one would potentially record the general topics of conversation with perhaps a pre-made company telephone memo form.
Both the letters and the memos would go into the project file. Thus, at any one time you could look into the file and have a complete history of the various communications that took place.
Today, much of our communication is by email and still much by telephone.
I was wondering how many of you deal with the challenge of documenting emails and saving them in "project files" to be able to return to them in the future if needed? I know a number of engineers who simply let their in box fill up with vast quantities of emails and, under Microsoft Outlook, they get archived somewhere as time passes.
This doesn't seem like a good plan.
What do you all do?
For telephones one would potentially record the general topics of conversation with perhaps a pre-made company telephone memo form.
Both the letters and the memos would go into the project file. Thus, at any one time you could look into the file and have a complete history of the various communications that took place.
Today, much of our communication is by email and still much by telephone.
I was wondering how many of you deal with the challenge of documenting emails and saving them in "project files" to be able to return to them in the future if needed? I know a number of engineers who simply let their in box fill up with vast quantities of emails and, under Microsoft Outlook, they get archived somewhere as time passes.
This doesn't seem like a good plan.
What do you all do?