I am trying to pick a project management software to recommend for general adoption at MIT FutureTech.
I am biased towards Asana but want to check what other people in the community are using and hear experiences/suggestions before I commit.
Apologies if this question seems self-indulgent and of narrow interest.
I imagine that choosing project management software for research groups/projects is a relatively common challenge for groups in the EA community.
I therefore hope that this discussion may help others in similar situations now and in the future.
You can submit anonymous feedback here if you fear repercussions.[1] I will post any anonymous feedback I get in the comments (if it seems sensible/reasonable etc).
Tagging a few people who I think might have good answers/insights:
@Peter Wildeford @david_reinstein @Davidmanheim @Vael Gates @David_Moss @John G. Halstead @HaydnBelfield
- ^
For anyone wondering why some people might be slow to comment: Asana is widely used in the EA community and Dustin Moskovitz, the founder, is the largest funder of EA projects.
Just published this new writeup in our post sequence: How to Get More Important Things Done with the Eisenhower [Effort] Matrix - Inside the Mind of an Aspiring Charity Entrepreneur [Follow Along] #2 — EA Forum (effectivealtruism.org)
In short, after reading through Charity Entrepreneurship's handbook, I tried to implement CE's adapted Eisenhower Matrix on a few of the popular task/project management software.
You can see the Eisenhower Effort Matrix in action in both ClickUp and Notion, as well as my personal usage tips.
Unfortunately, I wasn't able to implement the EEM on Asana.
Hope this helps.
(Commenting here in addition to your post)
Thanks for this! I appreciate the write-up. Just wanted to quickly share that tried the EEM but eventually moved to a 'Must, Should, Could' system like here. I use this on Google Tasks and other task management systems. Depending on the system I use a number or title to indicate the class of task. So far it has worked well for me. Of course different things will work for different people!