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Redmine.
A bunch of plugins for sharpening for any methodology like Scrum or Kanban.
Your small team could play Scrum / Kanban .
Here you can find a list of tools with filters.
Also pay attention to Redmine, ActiveCollab, Basecamp.
And the stickers aren't that bad, by the way =))
For myself, I use the application for Google Chrome ActiveInbox for Gmail and Google Apps
Adds GTD functionality directly to Gmail. Lightweight, not hung with a bunch of extras, integrated into the mail, which is convenient.
If there is Exchange and MS, then through Outlook it is possible to distribute tasks quite successfully. Another option is MS Project. In conjunction with the server and Exchange, tasks will automatically appear on the necessary resources.
Timer (teamer.ru) if you just need a list of tasks and distribute them among employees, and if you want to try agile, then try pivotaltracker.com
You are offered, basically, some large and heavy systems.
They are handy for managing projects in a fairly large organization.
I think for a small team, acunote is a good fit . This is such
an extended tudushka. You can create projects and assign tasks to them.
Tasks can be commented, set their priority and execution time.
Tasks can be combined into sprints, but you can not combine them. The interface,
of course, is inconvenient and ugly (not like in agilezen ), but everything is free.
We work according to Scrum , so SrumDesk is an indispensable Task Manager .
For teams of up to 5 people it is absolutely free.
Its main advantage over other tools for Scrum is that it follows the methodology very strictly, at least in the sense in which we understand Scrum. This indicates the sufficient flexibility of ScrumDesk - if some feature is not needed, you can simply not use it, and vice versa, you can use the tool in your own way.
We tried many options, including the one listed above, but settled on this particular manager.
You can try Collabtive: collabtive.o-dyn.de/index.php
In short, this is an open source analogue of Basecamp. Lightweight, fast, put on your server.
As a task manager, it suits well IMHO.
I will join many who have spoken and advise Scrum, and with it www.scrumy.com
If you have a team, yes, you need all sorts of things. Again, if there are programmers in the team, where tasks are bugs, features, chores, this is one thing. I vote for Unfuddle and PivotalTracker
But if abstract projects in a vacuum, that's different. Basecamp rules here, but Teambox seems to have a lot more options. There is even something like a twitter for reporting short news on the project.
But in addition to all this, you just need to write down tasks for yourself, sort them out according to priorities, somehow organize and mark the completed ones. Dumb and as simple as possible. He himself began to write such a thing (http://tadalist.com is the closest thing to that). But then https://mail.google.com/tasks/canvas appeared and I ended my project. Everything was done just the way I wanted it. I just wish I could collapse/expand groups. And so they just look like a big sheet with different indents. But, in general, it's also good.
I have been using planfix.ru
for several years. you can almost agree on your features with them) have recently developed a lot, for a fee, but it seems that up to 5 people in the team do not take money
Organoid Task Manager
Can be downloaded from Google Play for Android.
The advantage is the simplicity and the ability to control the acceptance of tasks for execution by team members.
Advanced task manager:
● Group management of task statuses (“inactive”, “actual”, “suspended”, “overdue”, “completed”, “cancelled”).
● Hierarchical tasks for project management.
● Automatic placement of due dates for tasks and events from Organoid to Google Calendar of performers and recipients.
● Interactive graphic charts of task performance statistics. By clicking on the graph, you can see a list of tasks for which it was built. Statistics charts can be output to a PDF document, printed or sent to your contacts.
● Shared and personal tags allow you to categorize tasks and projects.
● Cloud matching of documents and tasks via Google Drive.
● Facebook and Slack integration, hierarchical nested tasks, collaborative and personal tagging, cloud-based document approval - all of these features can be used to manage fairly large projects
asana. User friendly, free version, mobile apps, integration with Slack Evernote, Dropbox, Instagant, etc. Most of all I like the calendar function - I have been looking for such functionality for a long time.
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