---
title: Google Docs Real‑Time Review Workflow: Remote Team Setup
siteUrl: https://logzly.com/collabdocsinsider
author: collabdocsinsider (CollabDocs Insider)
date: 2026-07-10T11:01:13.516493
tags: [remoteteam, googledocs, workflowautomation]
url: https://logzly.com/collabdocsinsider/google-docs-realtime-review-workflow-remote-team-setup
---


Tired of hunting for the latest doc version and chasing approvals across time zones? You’re not alone—remote teams waste hours juggling duplicated files and lost comments.  
This guide shows you how to build a **google docs real‑time review workflow** that centralizes feedback, [tracks approvals](/collabdocsinsider/automate-document-approvals-in-google-docs-sheets), and sends automatic email notifications—so your team can focus on work, not version chaos.

## Why a Real‑Time Review Workflow Matters

Without a clear process, every comment becomes a new email thread and the conversation gets lost in the inbox.  
People download, edit, and re‑upload files, creating a zoo of “final‑v2”, “final‑v3”, etc., while nobody knows which version is truly approved.  
When teammates are spread across time zones, these problems multiply—one person works late at night, another is in a morning stand‑up, and the document sits half‑finished waiting for a sign‑off that never arrives.

## Step‑by‑Step Setup

### 1. Turn on Suggesting mode  
Open the Google Doc, click the pencil icon in the top‑right, and pick **Suggesting**.  
Tell every reviewer to stay in this mode so changes appear as suggestions that can be accepted or rejected later.

### 2. Create a “Review Tracker” Google Sheet  
Add a new row for each document that needs review. Use this simple template:

| Document Name | Link | Owner | Reviewer | Status | Last Updated |
|---------------|------|-------|----------|--------|--------------|
| Project Pitch | =HYPERLINK("…") | Alice | Bob | Pending | 2024‑01‑01 |

Fill in the link, owner, and reviewer. Use the **Status** column to mark *Pending*, *In Review*, or *Approved*.

### 3. Add a simple [Apps Script trigger](/collabdocsinsider/automate-document-approvals-in-google-docs-sheets)  
Open the Sheet, go to **Extensions > Apps Script**, and paste the following code:

```javascript
function onEdit(e) {
  var sheet = e.source.getActiveSheet();
  var range = e.range;
  if (range.getColumn() == 6 && range.getValue() == "Approved") {
    var docUrl = sheet.getRange(range.getRow(), 2).getValue();
    MailApp.sendEmail(
      sheet.getRange(range.getRow(), 4).getValue(),
      "Doc Approved",
      "Your document has been approved. You can find it here: " + docUrl
    );
  }
}
```

Save the script, then set a trigger: **Triggers > Add Trigger**, choose **onEdit**, event type **On edit**.  
Now, whenever you change the status to *Approved*, the reviewer receives an automatic email.

### 4. Set up notifications in the Doc  
Inside the Doc, choose **File > Notification rules** and select “Any changes are made” with “Email – daily digest”.  
This keeps everyone in the loop without flooding inboxes.

### 5. Walk through the whole process  
1. **Owner creates the doc** and shares it with reviewer(s) in **Suggesting** mode.  
2. **Reviewer adds suggestions** and leaves a comment when finished.  
3. **Owner checks the suggestions**, accepts or rejects them, then updates the **Review Tracker** Sheet status to *In Review*.  
4. **When all feedback is incorporated**, the owner changes the status to *Approved*. The Apps Script sends a quick email to the reviewer, confirming the sign‑off.

### 6. Use Google Sheets for remote team approval  
Because the Sheet lives in the cloud, every member sees the live status.  
Open the tracker, see the green *Approved* flag, and move on—no more hunting through Slack threads.

### 7. Automate [feedback loops for shared Docs files](/collabdocsinsider/automate-document-approvals-in-google-docs-sheets)  
For an extra boost, add a second script that watches the **Suggesting** column in the Doc and posts a Slack message whenever a new suggestion appears.  
The owner gets an instant ping instead of waiting for the daily email digest.

That’s it—about fifteen minutes to set up, and after that you have a living, breathing workflow that **automate feedback loops for shared Docs files** without any extra cost.