15 Useful Project Management Tools
by Cameron Chapman
There is a huge variety of project management applications out there. Most are general purpose apps, not aimed at any one industry. But there is a growing number of project management apps aimed specifically at one industry or another. Applications geared to creative types are becoming more readily available, and some of the offerings are really quite good.
Many of these project management apps have built-in code repositories and subversion browsers (or are built around them). A few have built-in bug and issue tracking. Others include more than just basic project management. All of them can help you keep track of activities and team members. There are both free and paid options. Some have very slick interfaces, and some are modeled more after desktop applications. All are relatively easy to use and easy to set up.
Below are 15 useful project management applications, almost all of which are targeted directly at Web developers, designers (both Web and print) and other creative types. The last one is not geared specifically to creative types but is the most unique project management application I’ve found and is included on that basis as well as because of its potential usefulness for designers and developers.
Also consider our previous article:
1. Basic Project Management Apps
These applications are marketed specifically for project management. Most include things like task-, team-, and goal-management features. Some include additional features such as time tracking and invoicing.
Lighthouse
Lighthouse is a bug- and issue-tracking app that tracks timelines and milestones, integrates with your email client and more. You can update tickets through your inbox, manage your beta testing (by making tickets and milestones public), integrate it with subversion and manage and prioritize your tickets.
Project creation is simple; only a project title and description is required. Once a project is created, tickets, messages and milestones can be entered. Ticket creation can be done by email (the email address to send tickets to is displayed on the “Tickets” page). You can show tickets based on a variety of criteria, including date, state (open or closed) and who is responsible for them. Message creation is easier than email, and you can attach files up to 50 MB in size. When you create a milestone you simply enter the title, the date it’s due and the goals or focus for that particular milestone. It doesn’t get much simpler than that.
Permissions are easy to set, and you can invite users by email. One of the best features of Lighthouse is its Beacon and API integration. With the API, you can customize tickets, projects, changesets, milestones, messages and more. Integrate it with other services (such as Google Calendar), or make desktop applications that use Lighthouse. The APIs make Lighthouse infinitely more useful, because you can really customize it to fit your current workflow.
Lighthouse is great for Web development teams (or individuals) and has a very easy-to-use interface. They have paid and free plans, all of which include unlimited open-source projects. The free plan lets you manage one private project with up to two people on the account. The paid plans range from $10 per month for the Personal plan (with up to 3 projects, 10 users and 100 MB of file upload storage space) to $120 per month for the Platinum plan (with unlimited projects, up to 50 public projects, unlimited users and 30 GB of file upload space).
When combined with a subversion app, Lighthouse provides a pretty complete project management app for developers. Subversion integration is pretty straightforward, and the help file provided gives complete step-by-step instructions for setup.
Springloops
Springloops is another subversion browser that integrates project management. It counts a unique AJAX code browser and Basecamp integration as among its features.
The Springloops interface is very intuitive and easy to use. Tabbed navigation provides access to the log, source and deployment information. Adding users is done via email, along with the ability to create usernames and passwords (making it easier and faster for them to get on board with a project). Creating new projects is simple, with a few different templates available (including a starter template). You can migrate an existing repository into Springloops as well (including plain text dumps). For added project management ability, Springloops can be integrated with Basecamp.
Springloops has a number of plans available, both paid and free. The free plan includes 25 MB of space, 3 projects, 3 deployments per day (using FTP or SFTP connections), roll-back capabilities, Basecamp integration, subversion and an unlimited number of users. The paid plans range from the “Flowerpot” plan at $9 per month (including 1 GB of space and 10 projects) to the “Forest” plan at $96 per month (including 18 GB of storage, unlimited projects, automatic deployment and secure SSL encryption). All of the paid plans include a free 30-day trial.
CreativePro Office
CreativePro Office offers complete office management tools. CreativePro Office is completely free, setting it apart from the other apps here.
CreativePro Office has the usual tabbed navigation, including tabs for clients, projects, time sheets, finances and team members. The dashboard presents a calendar with upcoming events, a list of your projects, outstanding invoices, notes and search functionality. Project creation is a bit more in-depth than with most other apps listed here, though only a client name and project name is required (you can also fill in a project URL, description or comments, category, date range, status, contacts and tags). Client tracking is integrated, making this handy for those who work with lots of different clients, and it could even serve as a simple CRM program, depending on your needs.
Integrated invoices and financial information is handy, and the finances page gives you options for viewing and creating invoices, expenses and reports.
CreativePro Office is very robust for a completely free application and is definitely worth checking out before shelling out for an expensive paid solution.
Jumpchart
Jumpchart is a website planning application that allows you to plan the navigation of your website by creating, dragging and dropping pages into the plan. You can also add text and formatting to pages and then export your CSS files and site map when you’re finished.
This is a great planning app for Web designers, though it’s not strictly a project management application. You can add comments to each page, which could serve to keep track of tasks related to specific pages. More traditional project management functions could be kept track of in the text of each mockup page or through the comments. The mockup and planning capabilities of Jumpchart make it worth using, even if hacks are needed to make it more conducive to full project management.
The free Jumpchart plan offers 1 project with 1 MB of storage and a maximum of 10 pages and 2 users. The paid plans range from the Simple plan at $5 per month (including up to 5 projects, with 25 pages and 5 users per project, and 100 MB of storage) to the Deluxe plan at $50 per month (including up to 30 projects with unlimited pages and users and 5000 MB of storage).
No Kahuna
No Kahuna is a simple project management and issue-tracking platform. It’s very straightforward and easy to use, with an excellent user interface. Features include task and activity tracking and collaboration tools.
No Kahuna is excellent for basic project management and ticket tracking. There aren’t a ton of features, which can be a very good thing. It’s very quick to get started, also a big plus.
There are free accounts available that include unlimited projects and users. However, if your projects accumulate more than 30 open tasks, you will need to upgrade. Paid options are reasonably priced, ranging from 3 projects for $9 per month up to 100 projects for $99 per month. Open-source projects are always free, no matter how many open tasks you have.
Basecamp
Basecamp is often considered to be the best project management and collaboration platform out there. Its features are impressive: to-do lists, file sharing, message boards, milestones, time tracking, project overviews and commenting.
The user interface is definitely one of the best out there, and because of its popularity, tons of other companies are making products that integrate with Basecamp, extending its capabilities.
Pricing is reasonable, though it’s definitely not the cheapest solution out there. The Basic plan is only $24 per month and includes up to 15 active projects, 3 GB of file storage and unlimited clients and users. The Max plan is a hefty $149 per month, but includes unlimited projects, 50 GB of file storage, time tracking, SSL security and a free Campfire Premium account.
2. Wiki-Based Project Management
Wikis are another option for project management, whether you use one instead of a basic project management application or in addition to one. One of the solutions below is geared to complete project management and includes additional features, while the other is just a wiki and is suitable for project management and other uses.
Trac Project
Trac Project is a project management app that is based on wiki functionality. It also includes a subversion browser, a timeline, ticket tracking, a road map (showing milestones and the number of current open and closed tickets) and builds status tracking.
One of Trac’s best features is the range of plug-ins available for it. There are plug-ins for Web administration, authentication, code documentation, file management, ticketing, testing, user management and version control.
Another big advantage: Trac is free and licensed under a modified BSD license.
PBwiki
PBwiki is one of the easiest free wikis out there to use. You can share files with other users, set access controls for individual pages and folders, add other users to your wiki, monitor and track version changes and more.
Setup is quick and easy and can be done in less than a minute. The PBwiki interface is very intuitive, and there is virtually no learning curve. Creating folders and pages is straightforward, as is editing existing pages. You can also comment on each page, and get a printable version with a single click.
There are multiple themes you can choose from for the design, as well as templates for individual page content (or you can start from scratch). There are a few different plans available, both paid and free. The free plan allows from 1 to 3 users. Paid plans range from $4 per month per user (if you have more than 10,000 users) to $8 per month per user (for 4 to 999 users).
3. Bug and Ticket Tracking
Any time you work on a Web application or website, there are going to be bugs and issues that crop up. While some basic project management applications have built-in ticket tracking, others don’t, and sometimes the built-in solution doesn’t quite meet your needs (either because it’s too robust or is missing key features).
16bugs
16bugs is a very simple bug-tracking system. Its main advantage is the color-coding system used for different types of information (like updates, comments and closed tickets).
Setup is quick and easy. The user interface is easy to figure out. Creating bugs is easy, and the color-coded labels on the activity tab make it easy to see what’s going on at a glance.
There are a variety of account types available. The free account allows 1 project, 1 MB of storage and Basecamp imports. Starting at $8 per month, paid plans include more projects (3 with the Basic plan), 150 MB to 10 GB of storage, RSS and email notifications, Campfire notifications and SSL (starting with the $15-per-month Big plan).
JIRA
JIRA is issue- and bug-tracking software that includes a lot of great features. It has advanced reporting features, workflow mapping as well as issue and project organizing; it is also customizable.
JIRA also offers a number of plug-ins to extend its functionality, including Bamboo integration, charting, time tracking, project management, a calendar and more. By using plug-ins, you can customize JIRA to meet your exact project management and issue-tracking needs.
JIRA’s biggest drawback is its pricing; it’s not cheap. A hosted account starts at $299 per month for up to 25 users and goes up from there (250 users costs $599 per month). If you want to download JIRA and host it on your own server, it starts at $1200 for a single project team, and goes as high as $4800 for an entire organization. If you need an academic license, solutions start at only $600.
4. Collaboration and Conferencing
If you’re working with a remote team on your project, you’re probably going to need some online space to collaborate and meet, whether it’s to work on general concepts or to work out specific bugs. Here are three solutions to help you collaborate with those on your team or with your clients.
activeCollab
activeCollab is a project management and collaboration tool that lets you set up a collaboration area right on your website. You can have unlimited projects, organized into groups for easy management.
Collaboration features include file sharing, discussions (set up like an online forum), assignments, collaborative writing and reminders. Project management features include printing and exporting, time tracking, calendar and schedule functionality, ticket management and milestones. Plug-ins (modules) mean that activeCollab can be extended to suit your specific needs.
There are two pricing options available: Corporate and Small Business. The Small Business edition includes source-code browsing, plug-in support, themes, discussions, milestones, checklists, files, project templates, a mobile interface and localization support. It’s priced at $199, with support and upgrades being an additional $99 per year after the first year. The Corporate edition has all of the above features, plus the calendar, tickets, time tracking, pages (with collaborative writing and more), a project explorer, and status updates. Both packages include unlimited projects and users. You can also purchase a Copyright Removal license, which removes the “activeCollab Powered” graphic from the footer of each page, for an additional $199.
DimDim
DimDim is a Web-conferencing platform that provides collaboration tools for meeting online. It’s scalable, reliable and flexible, with both hosted and on-site versions available.
DimDim allows you to share your desktop with those you’re meeting with, as well as share and present documents (both PowerPoint and PDFs). You can also share Whiteboards, and it has built-in voice-over-IP and teleconferencing capabilities. There are public and private chat capabilities as well as annotation and markup tools.
There are free and paid plans available. The free plan offers the complete feature set, with support for meetings of up to 20 people. DimDim Pro offers the complete feature set, plus custom branding and up to 100 people in a meeting for only $99 per year. There is also an Enterprise-level package that includes all of the above but also allows simultaneous meetings with up to 1000 attendees for $1998 per year.
Vyew
Vyew is a browser-based Web presentation service that allows for custom branding and PowerPoint-like authoring. With Vyew, you can give a live presentation or just post a document for your colleagues to review at their convenience.
Features include real-time desktop sharing, whiteboarding and drawing tools, embedded comments, built-in voice over IP, free teleconferencing, built-in webcam video support, text chat, dedicated rooms and direct URLs and more. It’s a complete solution for Web conferencing.
Vyew has a number of plans available, including a free plan, which includes unlimited meetings, SSL secure log-in, up to 20 participants (all seeing ads) and up to 5 VyewBooks (presentations) with up to 50 pages each. There are two paid plans: Plus at $6.95 per month, which includes everything the free plan has plus up to 25 participants (or 5 with no ads), and up to 25 VyewBooks with up to 100 pages each, and Professional at $13.95 per month, which includes everything the Plus plan has, but with up to 45 participants (or 15 with no ads), and up to 100 VyewBooks with up to 300 pages each.
5. Invoicing
Unless you’re working on an internal project, chances are you’ll need to send out invoices. Having an invoice program that also does proposals is helpful, as is having one that integrates directly with your project management app.
Simply Invoices
Simply Invoices integrates with Basecamp, More Honey, Tick and Harvest to invoice based on time that you track with those programs. Features include invoice templates, unlimited invoices, the ability to save invoices as PDFs and invoice tracking.
There are a few different plans available, including a free plan that includes up to five invoice templates and SSL support. Paid plans start at $9 per month (which includes up to ten invoice templates, plus a custom logo and link-free invoices) and go up to $25 per month (which includes an unlimited number of templates).
Less Accounting
Less Accounting is a simple online accounting and invoicing program that is incredibly easy to use. Less Accounting has a variety of features, including proposal creation and tracking, mileage tracking, sales-lead management and expense tracking. You can import your existing Wesabe.com account, and you can even invite your CPA to look at your books. Less Accounting also sends a weekly email with an update on the status of your accounts.
There are a variety of account plans available, including a free plan. The free plan includes up to 5 invoices, expenses, sales notes, deposits, proposals, mileage logs each month, SSL encryption, reports and bank-account integration. The paid plans range from the Even Less plan at $12 per month (including invoicing, expenses, contacts, SSL encryption, technical support, deposits and reports) to the More plan at $24 per month (including everything in the Even Less plan, plus sales notes, bank accounts, proposals, mileage logs, bank reconciliation, support for multiple types of sales tax and more). A 30-day free trial is available for all plans.
6. Time Tracking
Whether you need to keep track of your time for billing purposes, for your boss, or just to measure your own productivity, chances are you’ll need a time-tracking application.
LiveTimer
LiveTimer is an easy-to-use time-tracking program that works on both your computer and iPhone. It can be used for billing purposes or simply to improve your productivity and accountability.
Features include a daily ledger, bulk time entry (by day or week), customizable classifications, multiple currencies, custom billing rates, intelligent report filters and a developer API. The iPhone integration makes it easy to track your time even if you’re not at your desk, making it more useful than many other Web-based time-tracking applications.
Pricing is cheap, at only $5 per active user per month. Qualifying non-profits get a 50% discount. There is a 30-day free trial available.
fourteenDayz
fourteenDayz is a time-tracking program specifically for teams. It features day-by-day time sheets, exportable reports (in both PDF and Excel formats), drag-and-drop categories and no user limit.
There are 6 different plans offered, including a free account (which includes up to 4 active projects/clients, 10 project categories, an unlimited number of users and reporting functions). The paid plans range from the Personal at $5 per month (which includes the free account features plus up to 7 active projects/clients, 15 project categories, 30 project subcategories and PDF reports) to the Platinum at $99 per month (which includes all the Personal features plus unlimited active projects/clients, unlimited project categories and subcategories, XLS/CSV exportability and SSL connections).
Further Resources
For more project management applications, check out:
- Simple Spark
Directory of Web 2.0 applications, with a list of more than 300 project management apps. - Listio
Another directory of Web 2.0 applications, with a huge list of project management apps.
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Samir Tuladhar
November 13th, 2008 1:48 pmThese are quite good collection of project management tools but I prefer Unfuddle.
I think you should include it in your list
http://www.unfuddle.com
Prakash
November 13th, 2008 1:53 pmyes a nice collection of management tools.
Eric
November 13th, 2008 1:55 pmGreat list. I’m also a big fan of OfficeTime for time tracking (http://www.officetime.net/). It’s intuitive, can run all sorts of reports, and integrates nicely into my Mac (haven’t tested in on PC).
PM Hut
November 13th, 2008 1:58 pmThere are are lots of decent tools (I can think of 5 at the moment) that should’ve probably made it into this list.
Haven’t heard before about the first 4 (Lighthouse, SpringLoops, CreativePro, JumpChart).
Basecamp and activeCollab were expected (excluding the invoicing part, which is the least related to Project Management).
Anyway, it’s a good list and it gave me the chance to check some applications that I’ve never seen before.
PM Hut
Guenther
November 13th, 2008 1:58 pmHi very nice collection i also can recommend.
http://www.clockingit.com
… and its free.
Greetings Guenther
Manuel
November 13th, 2008 2:00 pmExactly what I need.
Thanks.
Tyler
November 13th, 2008 2:00 pmI highly recommend Cashboard for billing and time tracking.
TriExpert
November 13th, 2008 2:01 pmNo Zoho Projects? No Invotrak?
Sebastian
November 13th, 2008 2:07 pmNice article, but I don’t like the idea to host my projects and all related stuff on external servers. Because most of these projects are looking nice, but almost no words about infrastructure, security and so on.
Ernie
November 13th, 2008 2:08 pmFor invoicing I recently found CurdBee, which integrates nicely with PayPal and Google Checkout. It’s totally free and has a great UI.
Lianna
November 13th, 2008 2:14 pmWhat would I do without u guys!
Great article!
Junni
November 13th, 2008 2:18 pmWe used to work with Trac for project management, but about 2 months ago we have replaced it with Redmine, another great tool
Violeta
November 13th, 2008 2:23 pmAt Work, we use eGroupWare. It have everything we need: Mail reader, Calendar, InfoLog, ProjectManager, Resources, TimeSheet, Filemanager, Wiki, Bookmarks, SiteManager, News, Polls, Knowledge Base… ^^ It’s really cool.
Nice article. (:
Abel
November 13th, 2008 2:25 pmnice article but for the graphic and creative are i founf action method to be really practucal an functional. check it out!!
here´s the link http://www.actionmethod.com/
Ole Bülow
November 13th, 2008 2:38 pmIts a shame that the article doesnt have all the free opensource selfhosted alternatives like:
Achievo
Bamboo Invoice
Collabtive
Simple Invoices
Trellis Desk
just to mention a few.. :o)
Ludovic
November 13th, 2008 2:40 pmYes Junni, Redmine is great but little known
John Phillips
November 13th, 2008 2:44 pmGreat list, but I’d also add Blinksale to the invoicing list. It’s dead simple to use and also interfaces with Basecamp.
Alex
November 13th, 2008 2:47 pmNice list. I’d add Xpenser (http://xpenser/.com) for expense tracking, I’ve been using it with Freshbooks. Submitting expense from google talk and sms, sometimes email.
Albert
November 13th, 2008 2:55 pmI was looking for a good projectmanager.. there are some opensource packets, but i’m just about to get a license for Activecollab, tested and looked very good!
Maciej
November 13th, 2008 3:02 pmYou could also try ProjectPier, a free version of activeCollab.
Michael
November 13th, 2008 3:02 pmNice to see Basecamp on there. Awesome app. The Writeboards with version control is the best asset.
Jason Hudnutt
November 13th, 2008 3:16 pmGreat list, but you left out Bamboo Invoice!
alex
November 13th, 2008 3:23 pmFor time tracking I use and recommend paymo from paymo.biz
Jdawg2k
November 13th, 2008 3:26 pmFreshbooks is an awesome invoicing/time tracking tool and quite popular. I’m surprised it wasn’t in the list.
John Faulds
November 13th, 2008 3:29 pmI think this post only really scratched the surface with some of the apps available out there for the different types of functionality.
Nate
November 13th, 2008 3:36 pmI’m a fan of Torch which works great with Google docs and also their CRM – Heap.
Dan Barnett
November 13th, 2008 3:39 pmHi – I’m the product guy at WORKetc.
Our web based software integrates project management with timesheets, billing, customer sign off, customer help desk/ticket support and more. For example, timesheet data is shared with project management data, fed through to the billing engine, viewable on the calendar tools and ultimately used to generate real-time management reports.
My philosophy is that running a design agency/web firm is hard enough as it is, without switching between multiple software applications in order to manage aspects of your firm. We’re trying to bring this all under the single application, in a way that is easy to use and adaptable to your existing business processes.
Anyone else think like this? You can read more about our integrated approach at http://www.WORKetc.com
Remco
November 13th, 2008 3:40 pmFor time tracking apps you missed Tickspot. I’ve been using it now for 2 years and love it. It also interfaces with Basecamp and Simply Invoices (which you do state).
Jay
November 13th, 2008 3:49 pmYou forgot Blinksale in your Invoicing apps. It’s incredible.
Tzury Bar Yochay
November 13th, 2008 3:51 pmat section #2 you forgot launchpad which got them all (bugs/scm/wiki) in one place for *free*!
Robert Lincolne
November 13th, 2008 4:07 pmLove your articles Smashing.. where would I be without this site.
Big laugh at Basecamp’s screenshot… ‘make the logo bigger’
Sophia
November 13th, 2008 4:22 pmI’m really surprised Freshbooks isn’t included in the list also.
Creative Office looks quite interesting…thanks for the great article and the suggestions.
~Sophia
Derek McDonald
November 13th, 2008 4:24 pmGreat tools, but it would be nice if there were more free ones. For the little designer a high cost product is out of reach.
I use trac where I currently work and it is great, some things could be better. Although I did manage to skin Trac to match the design of our website.
Mugros
November 13th, 2008 4:54 pmPBWiki is not free. At least, not for 4+ users.
bino
November 13th, 2008 4:54 pmDoes anyone know a true application doing projectmanager?????!!
thanks
Benjamin Shepherd
November 13th, 2008 4:57 pmA project management system i just recently discovered is collabtive. It does a similar job to that of basecamp and costs nothing.
eporress
November 13th, 2008 5:16 pmI think 14Dayz is an excellent online time tracking solution (whole office using it for every project). They managed to keep the app truly simple and easy to use, I love the UI. A yeah, fanatic customer support.
Mary
November 13th, 2008 5:19 pmHey, if you are looking for a good and inexpensive solution with project management, time tracking, issue and request tracking over the net, look at Easy Projects . Net. Might work for you.
Zan
November 13th, 2008 5:44 pmyou missed out redmine. redmine has everything that trac has and more. it has forums and looks better. its the issue tracker that my project is using.
another option is google apps. its pretty full featured.
Chris Monaghan
November 13th, 2008 5:59 pmTime59 (www.time59.com) features Time and Expense Tracking, Invoicing (PDF), and Payment Entry. It can handle overpayments/retainers and it maintains client balances.
Martin
November 13th, 2008 6:15 pmMy time tracking recommendation is paymo.biz
Matt
November 13th, 2008 6:57 pmOur biggest client uses JIRA. It works pretty well, but sometimes we’ll get a list of several unrelated problems on one ticket, which makes it harder for us to get it out of our queue. I know that’s just a human error, but it can still be pretty annoying.
Karl S.
November 13th, 2008 7:06 pmI’m with the folks that mentioned Blinksale. It is an incredible easy-to-use billing application.
Also, if you’re looking for free CRM, you might check out Zoho’s CRM application. It’s free and works as well as what I was previously paying a bundle for with Salesforce.com. Highly recommended.
Thanks for a great set of tools. I’m looking forward to checking some of these out.
Gene T.
November 13th, 2008 7:42 pmBasecamp clone after Basecamp clone. They’re great, if Basecamp is what you want.
But if you want something new, check out Product Planner and Scrumy.
Kevin Micalizzi, Dimdim Community Manager
November 13th, 2008 7:46 pmCameron, thanks for including Dimdim on this list of tools. I was a project manager for years and finding good tools was always the challenge. Time for me to work my way through the list and check out the ones that I haven’t tried before.
For anyone interested in Dimdim free web conferencing, it’s an easy signup and your attendees don’t need to install anything. Also comes with a free phone conference bridge.
Paul
November 13th, 2008 7:49 pmTwo fantastic apps that should be considered for bug and ticket tracking are Request Tracker/RT (http://www.bestpractical.com/rt/ and Bugzilla (http://www.bugzilla.org/).
In the time tracking and task management category, I recommend Hiveminder (hosted) http://www.hiveminder.com.
Zima
November 13th, 2008 8:32 pmJIRA is free for personal use, too, which is cool. And they have a decently-priced hosted option.
Rohit
November 13th, 2008 10:00 pmA fantastic list but you have not mentioned Assembla which is also very nice. We are using it for our project and it’s really superb.
Mukesh
November 13th, 2008 10:17 pmWe are using Active Collab, but there is some great Time Tracking System too.
thanks
Razvan Pavel
November 13th, 2008 11:02 pmnothing beats Basecamp in my opinion
iAndy
November 13th, 2008 11:04 pmThanks, great stuff.
Jurjen74
November 13th, 2008 11:33 pmWhat about Team Foundation Server ?
Manny
November 13th, 2008 11:40 pmhttp://www.blinksale.com
Blinksale is also a great tool
Is also a very good tool, and also free, its not that expensice as Freshbooks..
Alex
November 13th, 2008 11:41 pmhttp://acunote.com/ is another good project management system. It is built on the innovative lightweight Scrum process and is focused on the day-to-day steps needed to achieve the goal.
Bart
November 13th, 2008 11:46 pmhttp://www.semmels.com would probably fit in the ‘collaboration’ section.
It’s a free, web-based solution for getting the input of many people in a structured way.
For example, there’s a template to create a page where a group of people can organise a holiday together. The questions that are being answered in the sample are: who’s coming, when are we going and where are we going.
If you try to let a group of people answer such questions, you usually get a whole bunch of e-mails or comments that take a lot of time to summarize.
With semmels, everybody can add suggestions in a structured manner, and others can vote and comment on each suggestion seperately.
Please let me know what you think of it! (good and bad)
uplift
November 13th, 2008 11:56 pmAnd what about Project Fork
http://www.joomlapraise.com/project-fork/2.php
speedcu
November 13th, 2008 11:56 pmThanks a lot, this is exactly what I was looking for!!! :) great! and very useful!
Michael
November 14th, 2008 12:01 amFor a single freelancer/hobbyist, I think Side Job Track is great. Web-based, free, and everything I need in a project management tool – my favorite is a stop-watch time tracker with easy attachment to tasks to automatically calculate costs and set due dates, all in one dialog box. For one guy managing multiple clients, projects, and invoices, it’s a fantastic tool.
Sylvain
November 14th, 2008 12:04 amActive collab is the best out there, and first because it’s a real app that you can install on your lan. If you want to manage your assets, you just can’t upload dozen of megs threw Internet even with a broadband connexion (and pay for it).
Christian
November 14th, 2008 12:21 amSorry, but I really dislike this kind of article… I know Smashing Magazine have lots and lots of these, but they bring nothing new. It’s basically just a summary of a Google search and a minimum of research on the resulting websites… Or so it seems. We end up with a bunch of links to some services and a list of their features. No new information is presented.
What would change these articles from being useless and almost annoying to being valuable and bringing new information to the web is a CONCLUSION or the like. A “list of links” is useless, but reviews and recommendations would be great.
Next time it would be great if you could think about these questions:
What’s THE best option in your opinion? In what situation should I use what service? What are the strength and weakness after using these services for a couple of weeks? What service is for beginners and what are for expert users?
Thanks!
Nauglamir
November 14th, 2008 12:33 amGreat… thanks for input
Armin
November 14th, 2008 12:39 amI would add ClockingIT to the list.
Although advertised as “Timetracking 2.0″ it includes a wiki, forums, online chat and subversion integration is in the works.
Did I mention it’s free and can be installed locally?
yoshi
November 14th, 2008 12:43 amnice list
Ashraf
November 14th, 2008 12:45 amExcellent. thanks for sharing.
Phil Collins
November 14th, 2008 12:48 amWe’ve used ActiveCollab for about six months now and I have to say we made the right decision. It’s clean, easy to use and not overly complicated like most other project management or collaboration products out there.
Brijesh Bolar
November 14th, 2008 12:52 amA very good list of Project Management Tools. But I agree with what Christian says..
A comparison of various tools across various parameters / features would definitely help.
More like if we looking for so and so feature then which tool would best fit our requirement.
Vegar
November 14th, 2008 1:03 amFogbugz is one of the application that deserves to be scratched a little…
Martin Majling
November 14th, 2008 1:04 amGreat post , i have more 2 tips for web time tracker,
1) getharvest.com , nice timetracking , great iPhone integration
2) slimtimer.com/ , nice and basic version free :-), pay version have export data
for desktop (mac) i have 2 fav. iClockr (time tracking), iGTD
Sylvain
November 14th, 2008 1:12 amFor bug tracking there is an Open Source solution: Mantis
Ruslan
November 14th, 2008 1:20 amdotProject was not mentioned there. That is also very powerfull tool
http://www.dotproject.net/
thedannybarnes
November 14th, 2008 1:24 amI’m a fan of Officetime… it’s desktop-based, really simple and pretty cheap.
Jack
November 14th, 2008 1:29 amLess Accounting is fantastic! It is still a little bit rough around the edges and the development of new features and bug fixes is not always as fast as one would hope, but the concept and execution are brilliant.
For me it really means less accounting and getting more design work done.
Christian Niklas
November 14th, 2008 1:34 amI suggest to add mite to your list. I’s a superb time tracking and project mananging tool.
Giboo
November 14th, 2008 1:35 amAbout time traking : I’m using a small free app, online and with a desktop widget, really great :
Toggl
Samuele Coppede
November 14th, 2008 1:35 amYou Forgot NetOffice,
it is opensource and downlodable ( written in PHP)
Net Office sourceforge page
Bye
mustundag
November 14th, 2008 1:45 amI was looking for something like this. It is needed for me
Neil
November 14th, 2008 1:49 amYeah ActiveCollab is the one i just bought into… With this article being days late…
OpenGoo is a better version of the free original activecollab, and in my eyes nicer than ProjectPier
Horace Ho
November 14th, 2008 2:38 amThanks very much for the great information!
Hans
November 14th, 2008 3:00 amWe use Achievo for all our project stuff – project management, tasks, time tracking, invocing, CRM etc. It’s Open Source and you host it yourself!
Akiva Levy
November 14th, 2008 3:21 amI am shocked to see that CashBoard is not being mentioned in the article. Surely it boasts many features that deserve to be included in your review; invoices, time tracking, Basecamp integration, reports, client inclusion and more. It also has various account plans from free to paid services.
Check them out: http://cashboardapp.com
Akiva Levy, founder Six Thirteen Design
Priyanka
November 14th, 2008 3:29 amGood List! Also a great project management tool should be added to it.
DeskAway
I have been using DeskAway from past few months & I am quiet happy with the features & service provided. Also they are providing a lot of new features like tracking Project history & also a lot of foreign languages are supported which is amazing.
http://www.deskaway.com
Benja
November 14th, 2008 3:38 amThanks for this list.
There is also clocking it: http://www.clockingit.com/.
It’s a free project management tool written in ruby . The sources are downloadable.
Suruchi
November 14th, 2008 3:46 am@ Priyanka. Thanks to point out DeskAway. Even we are using DeskAway for project management & collaboration.Its a great tool indeed.
Nirav Doshi
November 14th, 2008 3:54 amCheck out one of the best (and commercial not costly too) products over the last 3 years: http://www.celoxis.com
This is the only product I could find which allows you prepare a truely hierarchical project plan (online!), just like Microsoft Project Professional. Updating the tasks is also relatively simple for your users.
Timesheets, billing, clients, reports -> Everything managed in a single app.
Check it out!
Kailash Badu
November 14th, 2008 3:57 amI am surprised either that freshbooks is not mentioned.
Of all the PM/Bug Tracking software I know about, none beat FogBugs
Sudhanshu
November 14th, 2008 4:18 amCheck out http://www.actionmethod.com I tried the service and feel that it is one of the best solutions out there.
Bruno Alberto Byington Neto De Figueiredo
November 14th, 2008 4:26 amThanks, Im also needing something like a cool Project Management Application.
Im somehow however not that patient just jet to check through all of them. So I was starting to think why dont just do your own? I Mean I do work on DHTML, Python and stuff like that. I am the geek in the creative person so… why not programm your own suit of beauty to coordinate things around? Im not really sure how time will pass when programming something like basecamp? Nah Im not really out of my mind guys Im just thinking technically hardcore mainly simple. Creativity is somewhere in between the hardcore and simplicity, cant tell you yet where exactly?
any suggestions?
Thanks alot.
ToonCave.com
November 14th, 2008 4:40 amGood info. I’ve been using tadalist for about a year now and it looks like I need to step up my game. :)
http://www.tadalist.com/
bend
November 14th, 2008 5:03 amAnother vote for Redmine. Just switched from TFS a month ago.
Shane Cronin
November 14th, 2008 5:12 am“ACTITIME” is also a great time management and reporting tool. You can download a limited version to work on site. http://www.actimind.com/index.html. Works well for our company.
S
Pie
November 14th, 2008 5:17 amprojectplace.com is by far the best
abc
November 14th, 2008 5:27 ambugzill well than others
Amar Damani
November 14th, 2008 5:29 amI am looking for a good option for project management & time tracking, have got so many option so just confused, need to get it right the first time as its not something w can change everyday, i have seen the demos of deskra, deskaway, bascamp, whodoes, open goo, active collab & what not, had zeroed in on santexq.com (not cause its free) as it had one of the key feature i was looking for i.e i can put estimates to tasks & track them, i can track the team work hours using the timesheets & all, this on gets its bang on as i wanted it too ( i am not sure if this feature is in other web tool, if yes pls point me in the right direction. On more imp thing is that it should not cost me a bomb :-)
trust me i am checking almost all the tools on the web, if some one here is in web development than pls drop a line as which one you have used & why, it will be of great help, 5mpweb is also a good one you guys can check.. i am dreaming project tools :-)
Wuana
November 14th, 2008 5:31 amYou forgot one really wonderful and free resource.
http://www.freshbooks.com
They offer : bug/issue tracking, time tracking, invoicing, documentation collaboration
Best of all, it’s free to use if you have only 2 clients.
I’ve been using it for 2 years now. Top notch.
Jon Kruger
November 14th, 2008 5:41 amI’d also add TFS and Mingle from Thoughtworks to this list.
Mike
November 14th, 2008 5:43 amFor time tracking I would recommend Intervals http://www.myintervals.com. They just released a new milestones feature that allows for better project management as well. We’ve been using it for almost a year and haven’t found any issues with it.
Lauren Jordan
November 14th, 2008 5:46 amAlso try SugarCRM. It’s technically a contact management app, but has a great interface for project management and is very customizable.
Best part, it’s FREE, and hosted on your server, if you wish. It requires PHP and MySQL. You can have unlimited users and even limit their permissions to view only certain projects, tasks, etc. We used this at my last company and coordinated with devs as far away as India.
Cheers!
Dmitry Polushkin
November 14th, 2008 6:53 amUsing RedMine for a project management. Like it a lot. Have all the features that I need.
Barry Collard
November 14th, 2008 6:57 amHas anyone tried Toggl? A very useful tool in that it tracks projects in real-time via a choice of a downloadable exe, an Adobe Air app or using the Toggl website and best of all- it’s free (with the choice of a pay version for more complex services). I use it as a designer to keep track of all my different clients. It also produces reports for billing.
Brandon Livengood
November 14th, 2008 7:00 am@ Amar
We use santexq as well, it is a great web app, which is free and has a lot of features that others don’t seem to have. This is my recommendation to all that have been struggling to find a right project management app.