Hi Mat,
There are a variety of ways to accomplish this. First, EPPI-Reviewer contains lots of multi-user features - including the ability to have the same items coded by different people and to let you know the number of agreements / disagreements. You can read about this beginning on page 42 of the current version of the manual. If you'd like to set your review up to have more than one person accessing it, please let us know and we can sort this out.
You can also export in different formats depending on your needs. First, you'll need to determine which groups of documents you want to export. The easiest way of doing this is to have an 'admin' code set and then to have some codes in there for each phase of your review. If you give your documents the relevant code, you'll then be able to list all the documents in, for example review phase 2. Once you're able to list the sub-set of documents you want to export, there are two ways of exporting. First, you can click the 'export references' button on the documents toolbar. This will export in RIS format (which would be ok if you wanted to import into another bibliographic software package). Second, you can create a report on the reports tab. You'll need to have at least one column - which can simply be the admin code you've just created - and you can then generate a report that will give you the item ID and short title (by default, this is first author and year).
Finally, there's an easy trick that you can use to get the titles of a set of documents. If you have the admin codes as above, and have assigned the relevant documents to those codes, you can right-click any code and select 'Report: all text coded with this code'. This report is really for giving you a detailed text report of all the text coded with a given code in a 'qualitative' synthesis, but it's also a good way of getting a quick list of titles. Silverlight security prevents you from copying with formatting, but if you save the resulting report (an rtf file) and then open it in Word, you can copy and paste the titles into Excel. The line-by-line formatting is retained, so each title gets its own cell.
I hope one of the above helps - but let us know if not.
James.