Microsoft Planner cheat sheet: How to get started
Briefly

Microsoft Planner cheat sheet: How to get started
"Microsoft has smooshed together three of its most popular productivity tools - the personal task manager To Do, the team-focused Planner, and the robust Project for the web - into a single, intelligent workspace now known simply as Microsoft Planner. Those tools still exist separately, but you can think of Planner as an overlay of them all, a unified view that can handle everything from your personal grocery list to managing a company-wide marketing reboot."
"Remember when "planning" at work meant sticky notes plastered across your monitor and endless email threads about who's doing what? As it is wont to do, Microsoft has "reimagined" the sea of Post-it notes as a fairly sophisticated set of software planning tools, and the result is something that might actually make you less resistant to the idea of organizing your work life."
Microsoft Planner merges To Do, Planner, and Project for the web into a unified, intelligent workspace for managing tasks across personal and team contexts. The workspace can handle simple personal lists and complex company-wide projects, offering views to track plans, tasks, and progress. Copilot generative AI is integrated to assist with planning and task management. Planner is accessible in Microsoft Teams and via the web at planner.cloud.microsoft, with a mobile app available. Many users begin with the Teams version because of its deep integration into daily workflows. Important considerations include shared-plan collaboration and limitations relative to other project tools.
Read at Computerworld
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