What Asana Actually Does
Asana is a project management platform that gives your team one place to track tasks, deadlines, and who's responsible for what. You create projects, break them into tasks, assign owners, set due dates, and watch everything move. No more chasing updates in WhatsApp groups or losing track of things in spreadsheets.
Over 170,000 organisations use it — from small startups to companies like Accenture and Amazon. It works for marketing campaigns, product launches, operations workflows, and basically any team that needs to coordinate work across people.
Core Features
- Multiple project views — list, board (Kanban), timeline (Gantt), and calendar
- Task management with subtasks, dependencies, custom fields, and assignees
- Workflow automation with rules-based triggers (250 actions/month on Starter, 25,000 on Advanced)
- Goals and portfolio tracking to connect daily work to company objectives (Advanced+)
- Workload management to see who's overloaded and who has capacity
- 270+ integrations including Slack, Google Drive, Microsoft Teams, Jira, Salesforce, and Zoom
- Asana AI for smart summaries, status drafts, and project creation
- AI Studio for building custom smart workflows (with credit-based usage)
How Remote Teams Use Asana
For distributed teams, Asana replaces the daily standup. Everyone logs in, sees their tasks, and knows what's due. Managers get a dashboard view across projects without asking for status updates. The Slack integration is solid — you can turn Slack messages into tasks without leaving the conversation.
Timeline view is where Asana earns its keep for remote teams. You see task dependencies and scheduling conflicts in one glance. If someone in Manila is blocked on a task that someone in Singapore hasn't started, it's visible immediately.
Who Gets the Most Out of Asana
Marketing and operations teams love it. If your team runs repeatable workflows — campaign launches, content calendars, onboarding processes — Asana's templates and automation handle that well. Product teams use it too, though dev-heavy teams often prefer Jira.
Small teams (2-10 people) can start free and stay free for basic task tracking. Once you need timeline views, custom fields, or automation, you're looking at the Starter plan. Teams that need goal-tracking and portfolio views across departments will need Advanced.
What to Know Before You Sign Up
Each task can only be assigned to one person. That trips up a lot of teams. If you need multi-assignee tasks, you'll have to duplicate or use subtasks as workarounds. Also, the free plan got more restrictive recently — new accounts are capped at 2 users per team. If you created your account before November 2025, you might still have 10 seats. Don't assume you'll get the same deal signing up today.
