Free Tools to Help You Through the Coronavirus Pandemic
Free Tools to Help You Through the Coronavirus Pandemic
These free tools can help your organization, team and family during this confusing and dangerous time.
There are more than 10,000 coronavirus cases and more than 150 deaths in the U.S., according to the CDC. The stock market has taken a hit. Businesses are losing customers, and workers are losing jobs. It has become frightening, frustrating and even maddening.
In response to the pandemic, Zoom CEO Eric Yuan recently reminded us that we can all help each other in our own ways. He has provided K-12 educators with free access to the videoconferencing platform so students can continue learning.
Inspired, I shared an idea with Jason Feifer, editor in chief at Entrepreneur:a simple, organized list of free product and service offerings from all types of companies. Access to these powerful tools can help organizations, teams and families.
He responded quickly. “I like that. Maybe it starts as a post on Entrepreneur.com?”
Boom. Here we go:
65 free tools to help you through the coronavirus pandemic
- Zoom: Free videoconferencing tools for K-through-12 schools.
- Slack: Free upgrades to paid plans for teams working on coronavirus pandemic research, response or mitigation. Interested teams can email a special address to get this set up, and a consultation on how best to get started with remote collaboration.
- Humu: Free nudges to anyone who wants science-backed advice for how to best work remotely, partner with colleagues who are all over the place, show appreciation for those who don’t have the flexibility to work remotely (e.g. cashiers, medical personnel).
- Atlassian: Free access to Cloud products for issue-tracking and project-tracking software including Jira and Confluence. Also, free access to Trello Business Class for organizing plans is offered for one year to educators at K through 12 and higher education.
- Airtable: Free use of Airtable Pro plan as a modern database for any non-political, humanitarian effort tackling COVID relief. There is no time limit. It is also planning to make the service free for students too.
Read more: https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/347840