No-frills project management designed for research teams
Keep all project-related documents, to-dos, and collaboration materials organized and accessible. No more searching through email attachments for the latest version of your analysis or draft.
MacroScope is a bare-bones platform for teams to keep track of their projects and project files, without the clutter and complexity provided by other feature-rich project management tools.
Centralized file storage with sortable organization by date, name, and filetype. Never lose track of your latest analysis or draft.
Straightforward note-taking and checklist features. Add and remove items as needed without complex task management overhead.
Assign members to projects and coordinate across institutions without unnecessary administrative layers.
Quick status overview for research supervisors. See progress at a glance without micromanagement features.
Intentionally designed without calendar features or complex task assignment that burden teams with administrative overhead.
Tailored for how academic teams actually work. From thesis coordination to multi-institutional collaborations.
Coordinate research across universities and research centers
Organize thesis research, drafts, and advisor collaboration
Track experiments, data files, and lab team coordination
Manage paper drafts, references, and co-author contributions
Track funded research progress and deliverables
Perfect for any team seeking simple project management
Academic research requires coordination, but traditional project management tools often impose complex workflows that don't align with scholarly work patterns. MacroScope offers a different approach: essential organizational tools designed specifically for research environments.
MacroScope recognizes that research teams operate with high degrees of autonomy and expertise. Our tools provide necessary coordination without imposing unnecessary administrative processes or complex scheduling and task assignment.
Developed with input from active academic researchers who understand the balance between organizational needs and research productivity.