Consider that sharing may incur additional costs (e.g., if you use a repository). Therefore, at the start of any project, a data management plan is developed that takes into account the duration of the project and the potential use of the data even after the project's conclusion.
Supporting Data: As a minimum, the data supporting the published results of your research must be deposited in a repository. These are the raw data needed to recreate your conclusions (and the associated code, if applicable). They may include quantitative data, qualitative data, images, videos, texts, and so on, necessary to confirm the integrity of your conclusions.
Project-Specific Data: These are the data related to a specific project that you wish to share so that others can analyze, cite, reuse, and build upon them. Create a SharePoint folder on your Google Drive and share it with your collaborators (you can choose between view, comment, and edit rights). Additionally, project-specific data can also be shared in a repository if you wish to enable reuse outside of your consortium. If the data is sensitive and cannot be shared openly, consider which parts of your dataset can be made publicly available. For example, you may have raw data related to responses from a survey. In this case, even though the raw data from participants cannot be shared, you can share the questionnaire and related metadata so that others can see what you did and develop new research based on your work.