How to use Github Projects to streamline your workflows, reduce manual reporting, and eliminate hassle #138933
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nikhil-thampi
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thanks dude |
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Thanks, this helps a lot |
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Bridging multiple platforms is an everyday challenge for many project and product managers. The engineers are in Github for version control and code management, the issue tracking and sprints live in Jira, the planning, reporting and docs are floating around in Confluence and it falls to the product and project managers to stitch all of these together and keep them consistent and up-to-date. The work is tedious, time-consuming, and error prone.
This is why here at Github all our project planning happens within our own project management tool: Github Projects. Today I’d like to walk you through some of the core features we use everyday and give you some tips on how to get the most out of them. This is the first part of a three part series.
Some key highlights:
Top 10 Features of GitHub Projects
Kanban Boards:
Easily organize work with Kanban-style boards, where you can categorize tasks under multiple buckets.
Roadmaps:
Roadmap functionality makes it seamless to visualize long-term planning.
Milestones:
Track milestones like Beta and GA release easily using GitHub projects to see the progress of larger initiatives, across multiple issues and pull requests.
Issue and Pull Request Integration:
GitHub Projects are connected to GitHub Issues and Pull Requests, thereby allowing easy management of multiple tasks using single view.
Task Automation:
Task automation feature of GitHub projects helps in automatic management of issues and pull requests between columns based on different actions, like opening or closing of issues and pull requests. This eliminates the need of manual supervision and associated overhead of efforts.
Classification using Labels:
GitHub Projects allows you to assign tasks to specific team members and categorize them using labels. This feature is useful for identifying task priority, type, or who is responsible for each piece of work.
Filters and Views:
Filter helps to easily segregate tasks based on labels, assignees, milestones, or other criteria and these filters can be easily saved to the Project views.
Task Lists and Nested Issues:
Complex list of tasks can be easily managed using task lists and nested issues. This helps to understand the dependency between multiple tasks in the GitHub projects.
These complex tasks can be tracked using “Tracks” and “Tracked by” fields to show the relationship between various issues.
Custom Fields:
The tool allows you to create custom fields based on your unique project management requirements.
Insights and Reporting:
The insights and reporting features of GitHub projects provide valuable additional perceptions about the project progress and other key metrics.
Conclusion
GitHub Projects is a powerful, flexible project management tool designed to meet the needs of developers and teams. Its seamless integration with GitHub platform makes it an excellent choice for both individual developers and large teams alike. Whether you’re working on a personal project or managing an enterprise-level software development team, GitHub Projects can keep your workflow organized, transparent, and efficient.
What's Next?
One of the major criteria for selecting a project management tool is the visualization options a tool can provide. In the next part of this series, we will discuss in detail how GitHub Projects can solve some of your project visualization challenges.
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