Microsoft Planner: How to use charts for max productivity

When you have multiple tasks, and for you and your team, it can be hard to keep up with what’s important or not. Worse, if you don’t have a graphical view of the tasks with things like charts, you would have a tough time organizing tasks, especially if they grow daily. That’s why it is so important that you:

  1. Assign tasks to people.
  2. Assign due dates.
  3. Have a priority for the tasks.

It’s quite easy to insert a task, but without these 3 dimensions, the tasks will always continue to be “eventually” instead of being something that you’ll do.

Let’s make a quick detour to explore a simple but incredible productivity trick.

Eisenhower Matrix

It’s a famous matrix from president Dwight D. Eisenhower used by many people and one of the simplest techniques that you can use to control what you need to do. The matrix is a 2×2 table that defines the relationship between importance and urgency.

  Urgent Not Urgent
Important    
Not Important    

Before we go forward, try to order the tasks in the quadrants. For example, you’ll do the “Urgent and Important” first, but then what?

  Urgent Not Urgent
Important 1 2
Not Important 3 4

Let’s explore them one by one

Important and Urgent

This one is a given. Everyone agrees that this is the first one.

Important and Not Urgent

The temptation would be to do the “Not Important and Urgent.” We all have some of these, but you should always give your time to important tasks. If you spend time with 3, then 2 will become “Urgent” quite fast or even be late, and you don’t want that.

Not important and Urgent

Delegate them. If you don’t have someone to delegate, try to automate them. Check my Power Automate articles to find one that can help you.

Not Important and Not Urgent

This is another one that people struggle with. In my opinion, these are the ones that you can and should do one of the following:

  1. Say no
  2. Delete
  3. Please don’t do them

No one will be mad at you if you don’t do these tasks but have all your Important tasks done on time. These are the tasks that you can clearly say with a straight face, “I focused on the important tasks, so there was no space for these.”

Let’s explore the graphs, and you’ll see this in action.

Planner Charts

Charts are an amazing overview of the status of your tasks. It combines the dimensions that defined before and show you several graphs to help you:

  1. Decide what to do next
  2. Show you red areas like tasks that are overdue
  3. Show you, overworked people

Let’s look at the following Planner as an example:

It’s not a real planner, but it will give you my tasks for the next 2 days. For your reference, I’m writing this article 25th April.

Now let’s look at the Charts. To do that:

And you’ll get this wonderful view:

Here you can see a lot so let’s take things into sections:

Status

The status is an overview of your tasks and their status.

It’s super useful to know what steps the tasks are and areas that need some attention. For example, the “Late” tasks jump as the first one to look at. I use this a lot, especially when I have more than one task, “In progress,” meaning that I’m not as focused as I should be finishing tasks.

Bucket

Depending on how you organize your buckets, you can take a lot from this section. For example, if you have late tasks that are “Waiting for feedback,” probably it’s time to give the person a call.

Also, you can wait to have 4-5 tasks in “Waiting for Approval” before you stop and go over them in a batch. It saves you time, and it’s much more efficient this way.

Finally, you can see the “backlog” of tasks. Since Microsoft Planner segments the information, you can see what tasks are “In Progress” or “Completed” so that you know how many you still need to take a look at or move to other buckets.

The organization of the buckets is 100% up to you so you can call them whatever you want. Adapt them to your workflow but have in mind also how they will show up in the graphs so that they can help you make decisions

Priority

Going back to the Eisenhower Matrix, can you see the pattern here?

This is my opinion and you may not agree. That’s fine. But think about it and define the areas that make sense to you.

First, how to read it (how I read it), from left to right, I see the quadrant one to four. So:

  1. Urgent is “Important and Urgent”
  2. Important is “Important and Not Urgent”
  3. Medium is “Not Important and Urgent”
  4. Low is “Not Important and Not Urgent”

Easy to look at and to identify what tasks you should do first. More things to keep in mind:

  1. Red means that a task is overdue. Depending on the quadrant, you should look at it first or ask someone for help.
  2. If you have a lot of tasks in the first and second one and none on the third and fourth, it means that either you’re a master at saying no or you’re not classifying the tasks correctly. Usually, the latter so review tasks and don’t be scared to put them in low priority.
  3. All of these are guidelines. If you have to change the order or do tasks that are not important, that’s fine. But use this to your advantage and especially use it to show other people that you’re busy to accept a 3 or 4 quadrant task. Don’t tell them it’s a 3 or 4, of course :).

Members

Depending on your position, this one can be useful for:

  1. If you’re a manager to understand what people have more tasks or not.
  2. If you’re a team member to try to help other people with many tasks on their name.

Tasks should not be “Unassigned.” Someone should be responsible, even if it’s to understand the priority and give a deadline. If you have a team of people and there’s an “Unassigned” task, everyone will play the game “Not it” or think “Jack will do it for sure” while Jack will think “that one is not for me.”

Final thoughts

Depending on how you use the tool, you can have many things going on, and charts make your life a lot easier. It’s all about strategy and how you organize things; that’s why I stressed the need to use something like the matrix above or any other strategy that will help you focus on what’s important. I strongly recommend you look at your charts and see where you can optimize both your work and the overall team’s productivity.

. Have a suggestion of your own or disagree with something I said? Leave a comment or interact on Twitter and be sure to check out other Microsoft Planner-related articles here.

Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

Manuel Gomes

I have 18 years of experience in automation, project management, and development. In addition to that, I have been writing for this website for over 3 years now, providing readers with valuable insights and information. I hope my expertise allows me to create compelling, informative content that resonates with the audience.

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