Organizations
An organization is a shared workspace for a healthcare entity. It owns servers, peering relationships, channel grants, connections, and billing on behalf of a group of people — so the work outlives any one account and your teammates see the same servers and partners you do.
You don’t have to use organizations. Every account also has a Personal context, which is just you. Most people start in Personal and create or join an organization later.
Personal vs. acting as an organization
Section titled “Personal vs. acting as an organization”At any moment you are working in exactly one context:
- Personal — servers, peers, and grants you create belong to you.
- An organization — those same things belong to the organization, and every member acting in that context can see and manage them.
The two are kept separate. A server you registered in Personal is not visible to your organization until it’s transferred, and vice versa.
The context switcher
Section titled “The context switcher”A picker in the top-right of the Contact System header shows which context you’re in (“Personal” or an organization name). Use it to switch at any time. It lists Personal plus every organization you belong to, and lets you create a new one.
Your selection is remembered per account between visits. Links can also carry the context, so a shared or bookmarked link opens in the right workspace.
Roles and tiers
Section titled “Roles and tiers”Within an organization, members have a role — owner, admin, or member — that controls what they can change. An organization also has its own subscription tier, separate from your personal one, which sets that workspace’s limits. See Subscription tiers.
Next steps
Section titled “Next steps”- Manage your organization — create one, verify a domain, invite members, and handle billing.
- Core concepts — how servers, peering, grants, and connections fit together.