Task Management & Tracking
Task Tracking Management refers to the set of practices, tools, and system features by which individual tasks (or work items) are:
- created / defined,
- assigned to a user or role,
- scheduled (with start / due dates, priority),
- monitored for status and progress,
- updated (status changes, estimates vs actuals),
- communicated / commented on,
- and eventually completed (or closed, archived).
It is about giving visibility, accountability, and control over tasks so nothing falls through the cracks.
Key characteristics
Here are common attributes or features of task tracking management:
| Feature / Capability | Purpose / Benefit |
|---|---|
| Task Definition & Metadata | Title, description, tags / labels, priority, type, estimated effort, dependencies |
| Assignment & Ownership | Who is responsible, watchers / followers, reassignments |
| Scheduling / Deadlines | Start date, due date, reminders / notifications |
| Status & Progress Updates | States (e.g. To Do, In Progress, Blocked, Review, Done), percent complete, checklists / subtasks |
| Comments / Collaboration / Attachments | Discussion, file attachments, feedback |
| History / Audit Trail | Who changed what, when (edits, status changes) |
| Notifications / Alerts | Reminders, status changes, overdue, new comments |
| Views & Dashboards | List views, Kanban / board views, calendars, filters |
| Reporting / Analytics | Task aging, completion rates, workload, bottlenecks |
| Integration | Link tasks to external systems (e.g. in a larger workflow, or with emails, version control, document system) |
| Dependencies & Blocking Logic | Some tasks can’t begin until others complete |
A good task tracking system offers enough structure so tasks are clearly visible and managed, but enough flexibility so it doesn’t become overly rigid.