Now that you’re feeling confident about the basic tools in Asana, you’re ready for next steps!
Incorporate Best Practices
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Be Specific
Make Task names specific and action oriented, so it's clear what needs to be done. Start with a present-tense verb to get into the action (e.g., create, communicate, test, inform, review, edit, add, etc.).
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Add Notes
Add a Task description, related files, dates, or comments. Future you (or whoever you’re assigning the work to) will appreciate having the extra information.
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Set a Due Date
When assigning a Task to a teammate (Collaborator), set a Due date (even if it's just a guess). It should be clear for each Project and Task who is responsible for what, and when it is due!
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Add Collaborators to Projects
Add teammates as Collaborators on Projects and/or Tasks, so they can stay up-to-date on Task progress. Ping them by @(their name) when you comment on a Task.
Use Asana's Robust Features
Custom Fields are the real workhorse of Asana. Create fields for information you need tied to the work.
Custom Fields can:
- Track progress.
- Assign priority.
- Categorize Tasks into types.
- Provide additional information at a glance.
- Track/estimate time spent.
Project planning is a little like setting up dominoes. To make sure everything falls in the right order, set up Task dependencies, so it’s clear which Tasks are waiting on other Tasks.
Another powerhouse of Asana are the Rules and Workflows, which help you automate work that follows a predictable pattern. They prevent Tasks from falling through the cracks!
Are you ready to take your project management to the next level? Go to our advanced tutorial!