![]() ![]() However, it’s MOST frustrating on Monday and this disappointed me greatly. Thanks to checklists and Butler automation, it’s super easy in Trello. Maybe your workflow doesn’t look quite like mine, but chances are you still have certain things that need to be accomplished at each stage. We were having some issues with things falling through the crack, and can you blame me? It’s difficult to remember the right size for ad creative, checking URL parameters, ensuring other team members have signed off on aspects. While Monday has a Kanban view you can add that lets you sort your cards in a list-style view similar to Trello, it feels like a little more work to dive into all the details.Ī critical piece for me was implementing a workflow for quality assurance. Not the worst experience, but definitely not as simple as typing list names. You then have to drag the “lists” around in the order you want. □įirst of all, creating your birds-eye view in Trello requires creating a new board, and typing text for your lists.Ĭreating a birds-eye / Kanban style view in Monday requires you to create an item, customize options for the status field (and adding that if you didn’t happen to select a board where it’s the default), and then click “Add View” and select “Kanban”. In my opinion, although both tools “work” for this, Trello does it better. Obviously, both tools are built on the premise of being able to do this, with having “cards” (Trello terminology) or “items” (Monday terminology) that hold all the details of a task/project, and having a board that summarizes that view. I manage a lot of campaign requests and needed something to quickly show me what stages these campaigns were in, what was needed next, and any action items associated with them, while also giving me the ability to quickly navigate into the weeds when I need to see specific details about a task or campaign.
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