
Members, guests, and external collaborators
Understand workspace roles, item permissions, external access, guests, deactivated members, and why the same person can see different controls in different places.
Access has three layers
ALLO separates a person’s relationship to the workspace from their permission on a specific piece of work. That separation is the key to understanding almost every “Why can’t they see this?”, “Why is this read-only?”, “Why do they not appear in People?”, and “Why is the invite button missing?” question.
Access questions usually involve four layers:
- Workspace relationship: whether the person is a workspace member, workspace admin, guest, external collaborator, or deactivated member.
- Shared-item access: whether the person can open a specific project, canvas, dashboard, file, task, or Goals/OKRs item.
- Content permission: whether the person can view, comment, or edit that item.
- Management responsibility: whether the person can change ownership, member access, admin settings, or other higher-risk controls.
That distinction matters because external collaborators are not a workspace directory type. They are people with item-level access. A client can be an external collaborator on one shared project, a reviewer on one shared canvas, and absent from People at the same time.
For a broader workspace overview, start with Understand workspaces. For inviting full members, use Invite workspace members. For narrow outside access, use Invite guests and external collaborators.
Availability and permissions
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Available on | All ALLO workspaces. Some guest, external collaborator, or admin controls may depend on plan and workspace settings. |
| Available for | Web app, desktop app, and supported mobile review flows. |
| Who can view roles and access | Members can usually see their own access and the controls exposed on the work they can open. Admins can review broader workspace member state. |
| Who can manage workspace roles | Workspace admins, or members with member-management permission where supported. |
| Who can manage content access | Owners, managers, editors, or admins depending on the item and sharing surface. |
| Who can recover deactivated access | A workspace admin must reactivate the member or change the sharing model. A deactivated member cannot recover workspace access from an old canvas link. |
Workspace relationships and shared-item access
These terms describe either a person’s relationship to the workspace or their access to one shared item. They do not automatically describe what the person can do everywhere in ALLO.
| Relationship | What it means | Where it usually appears | Typical controls |
|---|---|---|---|
| Workspace member | A person who belongs to the workspace. Members can appear in People, member search, teams, org charts, assignment pickers, and workspace member management. | Home → People, Workspace settings → Members, member search, team lists. | Can use workspace areas allowed by their role and item permissions. |
| Workspace admin | A workspace member with administrative responsibility. Admins can usually manage members, roles, billing-sensitive settings, and higher-risk workspace controls. | Workspace settings, Billing, Members, role menus, admin-only actions. | Can invite members, change roles, review deactivated members, manage billing areas, and configure workspace settings where plan allows. |
| External collaborator | A person who is not a workspace member but has item-level access to specific shared work, such as a project or canvas. | Project Manage members, canvas Share, permission lists, and shared-item access screens. | Can view, comment, or edit only the shared item according to the permission granted. Usually does not appear in People. |
| Guest | A person entering through a guest or shared-link flow, often for short-term review or participation. | Shared canvas entry, guest name prompt, canvas collaborator list while present. | Can use the permission allowed by the shared item or link. Guest access is narrower than workspace membership. |
| Deactivated member | A former or disabled workspace member whose workspace relationship is blocked. | Access error flows and admin member recovery paths. | Cannot use old workspace, project, canvas, or socket access as a fallback. Admin recovery is required. |
People is for workspace members, teams, and the org chart. It is not a complete list of every person who has ever opened a shared link. If someone is missing from People, check whether they are an external collaborator or guest before inviting them again.
Content-level permissions
Content-level permissions describe what a person can do on one piece of work. The labels can vary by surface, but the practical model is consistent.
| Permission | What it usually allows | What it does not mean |
|---|---|---|
| View | Open and read the work. | View permission does not allow editing and may not allow comments. |
| Comment | Leave comments, reply, mention people, and participate in review where comments are supported. | Comment permission does not allow changing canvas objects, project structure, or workspace settings. |
| Edit | Change content in the work, such as canvas objects, project canvases, or editable fields where supported. | Edit permission does not necessarily allow changing workspace roles or billing. |
| Owner or manager | Higher responsibility for the item, often including deletion, transfer, or access controls where supported. | Owning one item does not make someone a workspace admin. |
Workspace role and content permission combine. A workspace member can be read-only on a private canvas. A workspace admin can still need the correct item context to manage a shared item. An external collaborator can edit one canvas without seeing workspace settings. A guest can comment on a canvas only if the link or invite grants comment access.
Where to check access
| Question | Check here |
|---|---|
| Is this person part of the workspace? | Home → People or Workspace settings → Members. |
| Is this person an admin? | Workspace settings → Members → role column or role menu. |
| Does this person have access to one canvas? | Canvas → Share. |
| Does this person have access to one project or project canvas? | Project member management, or the canvas sharing surface when only one canvas should be shared. |
| Is this person a guest or external collaborator? | The shared item’s permission list or guest/collaborator indicators in the item. |
| Was this member deactivated? | Workspace settings → Members or admin recovery flow. |
| Is the link valid but the account wrong? | Confirm the signed-in email and Switch workspaces before changing permissions. |
Use the right access path
| Access path | Use it when | Start here |
|---|---|---|
| Workspace invite | The person should belong to the team, appear in People, join teams, be assigned work across the workspace, and receive ongoing workspace context. | Invite workspace members |
| Item sharing | The person only needs one project, canvas, dashboard, file, task, or Goals/OKRs item. This is usually the right path for clients, vendors, reviewers, instructors, students in a specific activity, or anyone whose access should stay focused. | Project Manage members, canvas Share, or the relevant item sharing surface. |
| Guest access | The person should enter a shared canvas without becoming a full workspace member. This is useful for quick review, live workshops, client walkthroughs, and temporary collaboration. | Invite guests and external collaborators |
| Deactivation | A workspace member should no longer belong to the workspace. Deactivation should block old direct links. | Access a deactivated workspace |
If a deactivated person later needs access only as an external collaborator, an admin must resolve the member state and share the specific work again instead of relying on the old membership.
Common scenarios
| Scenario | What is happening | Best next step |
|---|---|---|
| A teammate joined the workspace but cannot edit one canvas. | Their workspace membership is active, but the canvas permission is view or comment only. | Open Canvas → Share and adjust item permission. Do not make them an admin unless they need admin controls. |
| A client can open a canvas but is not in People. | They are probably a guest or external collaborator on that canvas, not a workspace member. | Manage their access from the canvas Share dialog. |
| A vendor can open one project but is not in People. | They are probably an external collaborator on that project. | Manage them from the project’s Manage members surface, not from People. |
| Someone sees “no permission” from an old link. | The item may be unshared, deleted, moved, restricted, or blocked by workspace deactivation. | Check the active workspace, signed-in email, item permission, and member status. See When you cannot access work. |
| A reviewer cannot comment. | The link or invite may grant only view access, or comments may not be available for that item state. | Change the item permission to comment or edit where supported, then use Read-only troubleshooting if the controls still do not appear. |
| An admin button is missing. | The user may not be a workspace admin, the plan may not include that action, or the action belongs to the item rather than the workspace. | Check Manage workspace members and Change a member role. |
| A former member still appears in old comments or history. | Historical authorship can remain even when access is removed. | This is usually expected. If the person can still open private work, ask an admin to review member status. |
Permission and visibility notes
Keep these distinctions separate:
- Directory visibility is not access visibility. People is the member directory for workspace members, teams, and the org chart. A canvas or project permission list is the access list for that item.
- Historical visibility is not current access. Activity, comments, notifications, and authorship can show names connected to past work without making that person an active workspace member.
- Workspace admins manage workspace-level access. Item owners and managers manage item-level access. Avoid turning every item access problem into a workspace admin role change.
- External collaborators and guests should get the smallest access that works. Use view or comment for review, edit for contribution, and workspace membership only for ongoing team participation.
- Deactivated member access is intentionally strict. A deactivated member should not regain workspace access through an old canvas URL, project link, socket connection, or shared item path.
Common mistakes
- Copying a URL and assuming access was granted. A URL can point to private work. If the recipient sees an access error, update the sharing settings or invite them with the right permission.
- Adding an external reviewer as a workspace member. That can expose them in the directory, use a seat, and make cleanup harder. Use Invite guests and external collaborators when access should be narrow.
- Changing a workspace role to fix a private canvas or project. That is usually too broad. Fix the item permission first with Share work with teammates, Share a canvas, or project Manage members.
- Assuming Teams grant universal access. Teams organize workspace members. The item still needs to allow the team or member where sharing is required. See Manage teams.
Recover when access looks wrong
- Check the signed-in account. Many access problems come from accepting an invite with one email and opening the link while signed in with another email.
- Confirm the active workspace. A valid link can still look wrong if the person is viewing a different workspace.
- Decide whether the issue is workspace membership or item permission. If the person is not in People and should be, send or resend a workspace invite. If they can open the workspace but not a specific canvas, update that canvas’s permission.
- If the person was deactivated, ask a workspace admin to choose the right recovery: reactivate them as a workspace member, or resolve the old member state and share one item as an external collaborator. Do not tell them to keep retrying old links.
- If the problem started from Inbox, a notification, or an old email, check whether the original work was deleted, moved, archived, or unshared. Then use When work looks missing or Shared with me troubleshooting.
Related articles
- Share a canvas
- Invite guests and external collaborators
- Understand workspaces
- Switch workspaces
- Invite workspace members
- Manage workspace members
- When you can't access work