Post by yamanhosen5657 on Mar 6, 2024 4:20:28 GMT -5
Your company, so all of the apps need to integrate with the other apps in your tech stack. Customizable views. While there are a number of capable tools focused specifically on Agile and Scrum methodologies, I didn't consider those for this list because your project management app should work for every team in your business. That means customizable views and support for multiple project management methodologies. Pure project management apps. There are many software options that include project or task management as a small subset of features, but for this article, I only considered apps that were primarily focused on project management.
Robust team roles and permissions. The more people you involve in a project, the more important it is to set customizable project permissions. Some people may simply need view-only access, while others need full admin rights. In addition to those dealbreakers, I asked myself a number of questions while testing the apps: Is there an active development Panama mobile number list team behind the software, keeping it up to date and bug-free? Is the interface intuitive, or do you need to spend a significant amount of time reading through tutorials just to utilize basic features? Does the app offer some flexibility so that you can create your own project management methodology, or does it try to force you into an inflexible flow? I've been testing these apps for a number of years, but I started from scratch as if I'd never used them before.
For each app, I went through the signup and onboarding process, created a project, chose a methodology (Gantt, Kanban, Scrum, etc.), and created a new task, including adding a due date, attaching files and links, assigning the task, and more. After the first round of testing, I eliminated any apps that weren't user-friendly or were clearly geared toward bigger enterprises. Then I went back in and spent some more time in the top apps: toggling between view options and project management methodologies, adding a new user to the app and editing permissions, toggling between additional settings like filtering for my own tasks versus all tasks and more deeply customizing views (e.g., changing the Kanban column labels), and testing out any unique features. The six apps below are the result of all that testing.
Robust team roles and permissions. The more people you involve in a project, the more important it is to set customizable project permissions. Some people may simply need view-only access, while others need full admin rights. In addition to those dealbreakers, I asked myself a number of questions while testing the apps: Is there an active development Panama mobile number list team behind the software, keeping it up to date and bug-free? Is the interface intuitive, or do you need to spend a significant amount of time reading through tutorials just to utilize basic features? Does the app offer some flexibility so that you can create your own project management methodology, or does it try to force you into an inflexible flow? I've been testing these apps for a number of years, but I started from scratch as if I'd never used them before.
For each app, I went through the signup and onboarding process, created a project, chose a methodology (Gantt, Kanban, Scrum, etc.), and created a new task, including adding a due date, attaching files and links, assigning the task, and more. After the first round of testing, I eliminated any apps that weren't user-friendly or were clearly geared toward bigger enterprises. Then I went back in and spent some more time in the top apps: toggling between view options and project management methodologies, adding a new user to the app and editing permissions, toggling between additional settings like filtering for my own tasks versus all tasks and more deeply customizing views (e.g., changing the Kanban column labels), and testing out any unique features. The six apps below are the result of all that testing.