Tell me more ×
Answers OnStartups is a question and answer site for entrepreneurs looking to start or run a new business. It's 100% free, no registration required.

My, to put it mildly, understaffed and overworked startup is trying hard to not reinvent the wheel and outsource as much tasks as possible. So we are currently on the look out for a great project management software.

FogBugz and Basecamp look nice, and about a dozen others. Unfortunately there is no time (or desire) to try them all, so any thoughts and recommendations on project management tools are welcome.

share|improve this question
Thanks for asking this... I need it too! +1 – Jason Oct 11 '09 at 0:13

23 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

I have 5 users and the server edition of FogBugz was the way to go. We had used BaseCamp for a year prior, without success. Cost-wise:

$50 Basecamp version = $600/year

FogBugz Server 5 users (@ $200/ea) = $1000 upfront

Depending on the # of users, and if you can afford the upfront investment, the server edition of FogBugz will pay for itself over time compared to other hosted services.

Setting deadlines, time tracking, and project discussion were among our top priorities. FogBugz may seem intimidating, but you'll dive right in and feel like an expert user in an hour. It's as easy as e-mail, and now they have great plugins like Clark Kent (for time reports aka billing) and Balsamiq (my favorite wireframing tool).

Another great feature--our customers email their support requests to an address that goes into fogbugz and assigns a case to the appropriate person. We can assign the case throughout the team and maintain a full history in the case. Then all the customer's cases can be used for billing if necessary.

share|improve this answer
2  
Also, Fog Creek offers a free hosted "Student & Startup" account for up to 2 users. – Rob Sobers Oct 11 '10 at 20:42

How many are you? How much do you follow agile processes? I've been really happy with PivotalTracker, even if we're not an "agile shop" per se: http://www.pivotaltracker.com for feature tracking / bug tracking / todo tracking.

It's super light weight, but plenty powerful. The real-time-collaboration aspect is killer. Highly recommended. Also, it's free but I'd be happy to pay a monthly fee for it.

share|improve this answer
We are a couple of people, and we try to follow agile methods. – Slav Ivanov Oct 10 '09 at 21:00

We tried quite a few project management tools before we settled for Basecamp. It was by far the most:

  1. User friendly
  2. Shortest learning curve (Given you need to give access to outside vendors and partners for certain projects you really need the tool to be very intuitive and easy to use)
  3. Competitively priced
  4. Great feature set (Time tracking, collaborative whiteboards)

Overall we have been really happy using the service and would highly recommend it.

The 30 day free trial really lets you get your feet wet and see whether the service is for you or not.

share|improve this answer

Short answer: Use one for some some time consuming tasks, but do not rely on a single tool as the ultimate solution.

Manage the project by managing your ideas. Your dreams. Your major goals. Discuss then with your associates, friends, meetings, social network sites. Give this high level your personal touch and time and opinion. Write emails, blog entries, word documents.

I think the biggest area in project management is handling all the tasks. Call them User Stories, product features, tasks, sub-goals. Find a tool for this. Assign priorities, assign resources. Open. Close. Track. Graph. For this almost any tool can be used, even free or almost free ones.

I personally prefer open source over monthly subscriptions. Make a list of what you need the software to do and then check out the below link:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_project_management_software

There are a few interesting ones that were recommended here, both are good to start with:

http://www.unfuddle.com https://www.manymoon.com/

share|improve this answer

I find that it's always important not to try to get a tool to solve a process problem.

Sure use a tool once the problem is solved.

I spent a long time evangelising about Agile and Scrum and in a particular development team experimented with a, then new, on-line trial of on-time which was great - but it didn't make any difference to the team.

Eventually we scrapped all of the tools and used simple manual techniques. White-board, index cards etc. and it worked a treat. By removing the complexity of the tools and getting down to basics we were able to focus on the process and make sure that was right first; tools could come later...

share|improve this answer

Digital Dandelion tried Basecamp, but chose Manymoon for its tight integration with Google Apps for Business. https://www.manymoon.com/

share|improve this answer
thanks for that, trying it out now. – Anatoly G Oct 11 '10 at 19:47
Since August 2011, Manymoon is no longer accepting signups. They were bought by Salesforce, and replaced with Do. – Dan Dascalescu Jan 23 '12 at 3:29

I know this answer may sound very sales pitchy like, but I will try not to go there. Having gone through similar experiences ourselves, we decided to build a product that integrates all of these components into one, like the way they are "connected" in real-life.

Like Derek said above - its not just about project management.. its projects, tasks, project plan - charts, features, requirements, time, and managing all of this in one would be nice. I would actually love to hear your opinions about the product - www.trakeze.com (just launched this month)

share|improve this answer
Among 33 project management or CRM solutions I tested, Trakeze was the only one to make me wait for a customer service representative to setup my account. – Dan Dascalescu Jan 23 '12 at 3:51

Atlassian has a nice deal on right now ([1]) that gets you their suite for $10/tool, and Jira with Greenhopper is a great combination for agile projects.

share|improve this answer
I am just about to start rolling out the 'Dragons Den' setup for my project here. Fingers crossed. I have heard good things. – anthon Oct 12 '09 at 8:20

We've used and find it quite helpful to use VersionOne's Team edition (comes for free but I guess 1st year of subscription). Quite easy to setup & use. Oh and we're an agile shop by the way.

Although we're migrating to Microsoft's Teams Foundation Server, I wouldn't recommend that as you already mentioned your startup understaffed & overworked. TFS requires a LOT of administration but it handled your Project Management (agile or not), Continuous Integration, Build Management, Version Control everything under one roof. VersionOne on the other hand is only Project Management tool for agile only I believe.

My current team is 6 developers 1 UI guy & 1 tester

share|improve this answer

We're very happy with fogbugz, although it can get expensive if you work closely with contract developers ($25/user). We use their wiki for spec'ing requirements and their case management capabilities for project management.

We tried other solutions and they didn't work for us (namely trac and rally). If I had it to do over again, I'd give unfuddle a hard look. We use them for subversion hosting and it would be nice to have an integrated solution for case management and version control (and it would be substantially cheaper). A company we shared a lease with used unfuddle and they were very happy with it.

share|improve this answer

Just analyzed a lot of project management tools and made the choice to go with Unfuddle (www.unfuddle.com). Cannot say much about the results as we just started with it but for what we needed and from everything we looked at it seemed like the best choice.

share|improve this answer

Been using and unfuddle and fogbugz for 3+ months, we finally moved away from unfuddle and settled down with fogbugz.

Fogbugz has the worst usability but you'll get used to it.

Unfuddle has a great interface but it's limited in the functionality level. SVN support of unfudle is great as well. Especially if you want to separate SVN access for contractors.

Also Evidence based scheduling in fogbugz is a game changer, it's one of those killer features.

Basically neither of them is perfect. If you don't need so much advanced stuff and time tracking, estimation related reports then use unfuddle, it's easy to pick up and a joy to use.

If you looking for a terrible GUI yet advanced functionality go for Fogbugz. Don't forget you'll spot lots of stupid restrictions such as you can't delete tickets, you can't modify history, you can't use bold or italic in tickets (a total WTF!).

share|improve this answer
I agree about Fogbugz EBS - beyond killer feature, it would be (almost) worth working at the commandline for that. However, I disagree on the usability - while its not completely Mac-like, I find it better than most comparable apps. Dunno, maybe its cuz I too think like a programmer... :) And btw, a lot of the restrictions you've mentioned are gone in the new version, with relevant plugins and such.... – AviD Oct 12 '10 at 0:38

At a previous company, I used Fogbugz and found it quite useful for basic feature and defect tracking and VERy lightweight project management. I have used Rally at 3 different companies and think it is great for agile product development. They have a 10-user Community Edition that is free. I know those guys well and it is a very well-run and reputable company.

We are using BaseCamp now for basic collaboration, but I couldn't imagine using it for project management.

share|improve this answer

I more or less agree with the answers above. Here's something no one mentioned which might at least deserve a review:

GoPlan

share|improve this answer

I've used Unfuddle at Lookery.com and now Shareaholic.com It's great for projects involving actual code because of how tightly it integrates tickets, etc with the actual code. It has a nice API too. I recommend it to everyone.

http://www.unfuddle.com

share|improve this answer

We started off with Dot Project an open source tool and have recently migrated to BaseCamp! Love Basecamp and highly recommend it.

share|improve this answer

Depends on your project nature, but check it out Jira or active .

share|improve this answer

I don't think you need any PM tool for small team of 2-3 people. It may just be an additional burden.

share|improve this answer
1  
On the contrary, it's essential. If you don't, you lose track of who is going to do what, and forget half the tasks anyway. A good project management app lets you focus on the task at hand while filing away other tasks without losing your concentration. – Paul McMillan Nov 2 '09 at 4:42

What sort of "project management" did you have in mind? Hosted or locally installed?

Are you trying to manage work by external people, or just for your internal team? Interactions with customers?

More interested in task/time tracking, or general feature/release management?

I'd split it into a few groups (assuming hosted):

  1. Software project management (managing software development, bug tracking, code checkins, versions, etc.)

    FogBugz, JIRA, and Trac (open source) are good general candidates. Not sure if all of these can be had as hosted versions (FogBugz can, of course). For "Agile" methodology support, there's also VersionOne, ExtremePlanner, Rally, and the ones mentioned above (PivotalTracker, etc.). All have hosted options.

  2. General project, task and time tracking (tracking hours, tasks, status, and usually files and conversations across multiple projects), not specifically tied to software development.

    Basecamp, ClientSpot, Wrike (all hosted) are good options, along with FogBugz, etc. as above - tons of self-hosted and open source options too.

  3. Customer support/interaction (helpdesk style with case or ticketing type support, email integration, reporting)

    HelpSpot, FogBugz, ZenDesk, Kayako (all have hosted options)

share|improve this answer

Take a look at ProjectPier.

It is open source (free) and self hosted. To be honest I can't tell the difference between that and Basecamp. The software does everything I require of it!

Yes, eventually you may want something a little more complex, or hosted off site. But startup = boot strap, why spend when you don't have to? Project Pier does enough to last you through these stages.

share|improve this answer
  1. Basecamp is solid
  2. Zoho may have something
  3. http://www.dreamfactory.com/ Dream Factory has a cool tool that used to integrate very well with Salesforce when I was there.
share|improve this answer

Most of these are subscription based tools. The free ones can work well too, if you can host them yourself...

If you're doing mostly software-dev stuff with some project management, trac is an old standard for that.

We've been using Redmine for our projects, because it has good integration with version control, and the ticketing and assignment system is quite versatile. It has most of the features all these others have talked about - wiki, document upload, version control, ticketing assignment, time tracking, charts and reports, etc. It really meets our needs nicely.

Not paying a per-user fee is also really nice, since it means we can give our customers access to the appropriate parts of their projects without it costing us anything.

share|improve this answer

There is a very long list of alternatives, here are just a few of the alternatives

zoho.com freshbooks.com centraldesktop.com deskaway.com smartsheet.com 5pmweb.com teamworkpm.net activecollab.com aceproject.com teambox.com fengoffice.com huddle.com comindwork.com nozbe.com getharvest.com wrike.com goplanapp.com egroupware.org clarizen.com hyperoffice.com liquidplanner.com severa.com

I made a comparison chart of all of the features and costs of the various project management software alternatives here

http://www.timedoctor.com/project_management_comparison.html

share|improve this answer

protected by Community Jul 9 '11 at 3:17

This question is protected to prevent "thanks!", "me too!", or spam answers by new users. To answer it, you must have earned at least 10 reputation on this site.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.