This document will walk you
through the usage of Office 365 Planner
What is Office 365 Planner?
Office 365 Planner is a new
application that Microsoft is adding to the suite of functionality available to
tenants. In many respects, it is similar to the popular Trello application and
well-suited to the management of small projects or the set of collective tasks
owned by workgroups. It is not intended to be as powerful and flexible as
Microsoft Project, which remains the tool of choice for project managers and
those involved in the day-to-day management of large or complex projects.
What
about licenses?
All users with eligible
subscription plans will automatically see the Planner tile appear in the Office
365 app launcher when it is available for them to use. No specific action by
Office 365 admins is needed.
Will Planner appear
for on-premises customers?
Given the dependency that
exists on Office 365 Groups and the Azure service, it’s very unlikely that
Planner will ever be available on-premises. Microsoft Project Server is
available for on-premises clients.
Who can create new
plans?
Right now, anyone can create a new plan. The OWA Mailbox Policy
used by Office 365 Groups to restrict the ability of users to create new groups
is ignored by Office 365 Planner. This can lead to a situation where a
profusion of new plans (and groups) are created without planning (no pun
intended) to create the need to clean up plans and groups afterwards. Microsoft
says that they are working on lifecycle policies that will make it possible to
check for and remove obsolete plans (and groups), but this feature isn’t
available yet.
What’s a plan?
A plan is
represented by a collection of tasks that are assigned to different team
members. Each task represents a discrete piece of work or other activity that
has to be completed by a certain date.
What about tags?
Six
color-coded tags are available to help manage tasks. It’s up to the members of
the group/plan to decide how these tags are used.
Do plans
support checklists?
You can
assign checklist items to a task. Each checklist item is independent of the
others and is either in a completed (unchecked) or done (checked) state.
What’s a bucket?
A bucket is
a container for tasks within a plan. In practical terms, you can have as many
tasks as you like in a bucket and as many buckets as you like within a plan. By
default, a plan starts off with a bucket called “To Do”, but you can rename it
to whatever you like.
Can I drag
and drop tasks between buckets?
Absolutely!
Take a look on Planner that used to manage any
plan
Statistic
Chart of all tasks in all buckets of a plan look like
Step by step to
configure Planner for our organization
The first time we browse to https://Tasks.Office.Com be look like , sign with your o365 Login
The first time we browse to https://Tasks.Office.Com be look like , sign with your o365 Login
Click to create a [New plan] look like
Creating
a new plan look like
Plan
email address be created automatically for our plan. Use the email for
discussions with all plan members
Creating
our plan
The
empty plan that just created look like
Add
a task to a bucket of a plan look like
Click on [Task Name] area to show the detail and can be set Status, Start Date, End Date and put assign for the task also
The
default detail of a new created task look like
Choose
a status for a Task
Choose
a Start date for a Task
Click on [Assign] icon to assign a one to do the task
Can choose yourself to do the task or select another one by click on [Add someone new]
I choose myself to do the task and close the detail task window
Can set a label for the task
The Task with yellow label be setting look like
The task with a resource be assigned look like
Changing the title of a bucket from [To Do] to [Apply Planner to Organization] look like
A welcome email to join a Plan look like
Click to add a new bucket
A new bucket with a new task be added look like
Statistic chart of Development Project look like