by riffmaster on 6/23/11, 2:10 PM with 14 comments
BackStory: When working on projects, there was really no way to track what was completed during the present week and what tasks were pending. Sprint.Im is sort of like an introspection on what work was really done. It's called Sprint.Im as it is loosely based on the agile project management process - Scrum. Each week here is a sprint and pending tasks are moved over to the new sprint.
I'm planning to add metrics to the tool so each team member can measure his productively and compare to his previous sprints.
I would really appreciate any feedback and/or suggestions.
by autalpha on 6/23/11, 2:53 PM
I think it's a great project. Congratulations on launching your beta. It's a great step and you should be happy and proud of it. Now just iterate like a machine and I'm sure you'll definitely see some interesting movement. Your space is interesting in that: there's a lot of players, but there isn't a king or someone who basically rule the rest (well, basecamp/jira maybe?), but that means if you focus (which I see that you are) you'll capture some market share that other guys haven't or can't seem to do. Good luck and as always, please update us on each iteration.
-V.
by cooperadymas on 6/23/11, 2:35 PM
I look at a lot of these project or task management tools. I'm fascinated by them and actually maintain a large running list. Too many try to use the approach of "simple" or "easy" project management. (See http://www.teamworkpm.net/ and http://www.easyprojects.net/ and http://projectbubble.com/ [title tag] and http://tasskr.com/ - the list goes on.) While simple and easy may be one facet companies or individuals are looking for, I think it's overused and the wrong approach. Realistically, claiming you are the best at anything is fairly haughty, but people are good at attributing it to marketing text.
You would probably be better off attacking it from another angle. "Effective project management for small teams." (Is it meant for teams or individuals? I presume teams, but it's not very clear.) That being said, the best approach is to run tests to find the most effective headline.
by vanni on 6/23/11, 2:36 PM
by djb_hackernews on 6/23/11, 5:39 PM
by riffmaster on 6/24/11, 5:50 PM