Does coordinating work feel chaotic? Kickoff meetings end, but teammates aren't clear on what to do next. Time is wasted searching for information across different tools. Often, there's no visibility into progress and priorities.
Watch: What is Asana?
Asana is a collaborative work management platform that gives your team a system for turning the chaos of unstructured work into a single place to coordinate and communicate about work. Whether you're managing a complex project or organizing your daily tasks, Asana organizes work so everyone knows exactly what to do, who's doing it, and when it's due.
That’s what Asana is, now it’s time for you to get a quick-start in Asana.
What you'll learn:
Time commitment: 15-20 minutes
Watch: Getting Started
Projects and tasks are the foundation of work in Asana.
Projects organize major initiatives or ongoing workflows.
Tasks are individual action items within projects.
Subtasks break down a task when multiple people need to contribute to its completion.
When to use projects, tasks, and subtasks
Before you start building, here's how to decide what to create:
Create a project when you have a large coordinated effort with multiple stakeholders working toward a common goal over weeks or months. Examples include launching a new marketing campaign (like "Q2 LinkedIn Marketing Campaign"), planning an event (like "Customer Education Team Meetings"), or developing a product (like "Product Website Redesign").
Create a task when you need to assign specific work or capture an actionable item. Tasks answer: who is doing what and by when? They typically take minutes or hours to complete. For example, create tasks like "Draft homepage copy," "Review design mockups," or "Schedule kickoff meeting."
Create a subtask when you need to break down a task into smaller steps or when multiple people need to contribute. For example, if you have a task called "Publish blog post," create subtasks for "Draft article," "Review and edit," and "Schedule publication."
You can create projects in a number of ways:
Start with these features:
Other features to explore:
1. Use task titles effectively
Task titles should be concise, specific, and action-oriented. Start task titles with an action verb to clearly indicate what needs to be done.
For example, say "Review presentation with product leads" rather than "Presentation with product leads."
2. Add context to your tasks
Use the task description to include all necessary details, instructions, and context so the assignee has everything they need to start and complete the work. Use Asana AI to improve formatting, alter description length, or adjust the tone.
Attach files or links directly to tasks for easy reference. This keeps all relevant information connected to the work in one place.
3. Assign responsibilities and set due dates
Assign tasks to yourself and team members so everyone knows who is responsible for what. Asana allows you to assign tasks to a single individual and add multiple collaborators, facilitating accountability and collaboration.
Add due dates to tasks to establish deadlines.
There are a number of key areas to know as you move around Asana:
Watch: Navigation in Asana
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Area |
What you'll find |
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1. Home |
Your personalized dashboard with work that matters most to you |
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2. My tasks |
All tasks assigned to you across every project (your personal to-do list) |
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3. Inbox |
Updates and comments on work you're following |
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4. Starred |
Work that you've starred for quick access |
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5. Search (top bar) |
Find any task, project, or conversation instantly |
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6. Smart chat |
Your AI-powered assistant that will help you prioritize upcoming work, summarize work in flight, and ask questions about how to use Asana |
Watch: Plan your day with Asana
Use My tasks and Inbox to organize your day and stay in-the-loop on work you’re involved in.
My tasks is home to all tasks assigned to you across every project in Asana.
Tips for using My tasks:
Your Asana Inbox serves as the notification center for all the work you're involved in—tasks, messages, status updates, and project activity—so you can stay up-to-date on work in progress and take action without leaving Asana.
Tips for using Inbox:
Here are a few best practices to maximize collaboration in Asana.
Collaborate in Asana with comments, messages, attachments, and @mentions, to promote effective communication among team members. Add collaborators, ask questions, and provide updates within tasks, projects, and portfolios. As collaboration happens, relevant stakeholders will stay in the loop with Inbox notifications.
Ways to ensure teammates are looped in:
Project creators should outline the purpose and objectives of each project or initiative in the Overview tab. Additionally, you can define project roles, connect your project to team or company goals, and share key resources. The Overview tab gives project members the context they need to contribute effectively.
If you've recently been invited to a project, use Asana AI to summarize recent project activity.
Update teammates on task progress by adding comments when there are timeline or deliverable changes, adjusting custom field values to reflect the current status, or marking the task complete when it's done.
Project status updates keep stakeholders informed on progress, blockers, and next steps. Status updates appear at the top of your project and in project members' Inboxes, ensuring everyone stays aligned. Use Asana AI to help generate your status update by summarizing recent project activity and progress.
The best way to learn Asana is by using it. Complete these 5 actions to build your foundation. Each one takes just 2-3 minutes.
The best way to learn Asana is by using it. Complete these 5 actions to build your foundation. Each one takes just 2-3 minutes.
1. Create your first project
Projects organize major initiatives or ongoing workflows that involve multiple tasks and people working toward a common goal.
From the +Create button, select Project. Choose a project from the workflow gallery or create a new one. Name it based on a current or upcoming initiative—like "Website Updates," "Q1 Planning," or "Team Onboarding."
2. Create sections to organize your project
Sections organize tasks by breaking work into phases like "To Do," "In Progress," and "Complete." Add sections that make sense for how your work flows. You can edit or add new ones anytime.
3. Add a task to your project and assign it to yourself
Tasks are the actionable pieces of work within a project. Create a task for something you need to do, using an action verb to start the title (like "Review homepage design" or "Schedule team meeting"). Assign it to yourself and add a due date.
4. Collaborate with teammates
Most Asana projects include multiple members. Invite teammates to your project—click the Share button at the top of your project. Then create tasks and assign them to the right people. Add a due date and use the task description to provide context about what needs to get done.
5. Move work forward from My tasks and Inbox
Navigate to My tasks and Inbox from your sidebar.
In My tasks, you'll see all tasks assigned to you across Asana. Focus first on tasks due today. If any tasks are overdue, adjust their due date to reflect when you'll actually complete them.
In Inbox, you'll see notifications about work you're involved in. Take action: comment if you have questions, "like" to acknowledge you've seen it, or archive notifications that are just FYIs.
Where to go from here:
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Where to go |
What you'll find |
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Asana Help Center |
How-to articles and video tutorials on Asana features in the Asana Help Center. |
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Live trainings |
Instructor-led sessions: • Getting Started in Asana to onboard effectively |
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Asana Academy |
Certifications and skill badges: • Asana Foundations Skill Badge for in-depth onboarding • AI for Work Skill Badge to incorporate AI into workflows |
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Community Forum |
Learn from other users and become an Asana ambassador |
Ready to get started? Jump back to the Practice section and complete your first 5 actions in Asana