For many users, Trello is a kind of jack of all trades and is no longer just used for classic project and task management, but also for many other tasks. For us solopreneurs, Trello has proven itself many times in corporate use: from creating editorial plans to launch planning and vacation planning, you can do everything with it. In this article, I share my Trello experiences and explain the most important things you need to know about Trello. You can find more ideas for what you can use Trello for further down in the article.
Contents
Brief introduction to Trello
What is Trello and who is it for?
Trello* [Links with an asterisk hong kong telegram screening are always advertising links] advertises itself as the central point for all tasks, team members and tools and as a way to increase productivity. Trello is an online tool that only works in the browser or in the corresponding apps. You cannot install it locally on your computer, whether Windows, Mac or Linux, and you always need an internet connection to use it.
Trello landing page screenshot
This is how Trello welcomes you on the website
The basic principle of Trello is Kanban, a system for production process control that was developed in 1947 by Taiichi Ōno at the Japanese Toyota Motor Corporation. Production process control sounds very sober - and it is. Trello's achievement is that it has made this system from a wall board with pin cards or sticky notes wonderfully colorful, flexible and expanded to include very useful functions and can be used online.