The workflow
Once a document is written, I'm using the "Check spelling" feature Google Docs provides. When that's done, I'm saving a local backup by using the "Export as HTML (zipped)" option... just in case anything gets lost. Then I switch to the Share tab to share the page with Brian. Brian will then get an invite to the document and can take over from there.
There's one quirk here with sharing. I don't want to manually type Brian's email address all the time in the "Invite people" dialog, so I'm just typing "Brian" and then hope for the auto-completion dialog to pop up. Now, Brian doesn't use a Gmail address as his main email so I'm usually writing to his O'Reilly address. This makes Google Docs wrongly assume that it's not necessary to show that Gmail address of Brian in the auto-completion dialog.
The workaround? From my Gmail account, I have to sent Brian a couple of bogus emails to his Gmail account every now and then to force Google Docs to "remember" his address in the auto-completion dialog.
Once Brian finished editing a document – by correcting my English, fact-checking, adjusting style, adding Google Docs comments, adding knowledge and so on – he saves and goes to the outline to change the color and status message next to the article's title. When I see this I can then go back to work on the document and pick the Revisions tab, comparing Brian's latest version with my last version before Brian took over.
When you check a revision, you will see strike-throughs and different colors and so on to indicate what was changed. Unfortunately, when you want to follow-up on a change you need to leave the Revisions tab again and switch back to the Edit tab – and next time you want to go to the revision tab, you are again asked to select which two versions you want to compare. While it may be possible to open two windows of the document, that could also be risky as both may be auto-saving every now and then. It would be much more neat if Google would remember the last selection of the Revisions tab, so you would be able to quickly toggle back and forth between reading a revision, and making changes in the editing tab.
Naming the files
In the case of Google Office Hacks, I'm preceding all file names in the Google Docs file listing with "GOHacks". Short names are useful due to the limited screen space (so calling it "Google Office Hacks" may push important information in the title out of view). Also, I'm dragging them all into the Google Docs "Google Office Hacks" folder for better organization. Then, the title is extended hierarchically to read e.g. "GOHacks - Spreadsheets - Add live data to your spreadsheet" (where "Spreadsheets" is the chapter title, and "Add live data..." is the hack title).





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