About this collection
A project planner is what you reach for when "make a thing" turns into "make a thing that involves five people, three deadlines, and a budget." It is also what you reach for when you are doing it all alone but cannot keep it in your head.
These printables include the basics — project name, owner, deadline, key milestones — and the helpful extras — a stakeholder list, a risk column, a status legend, and a one-page status report you can share weekly.
Further reading: a longer essay on building a personal planning system that pairs well with this collection.
Inside the collection are seven meaningful formats. The One-Page Plan is the right format for a personal project under a month. The Multi-Page Planner is for cross-team work where each phase needs its own page. The Milestone Tracker is a date-and-deliverable timeline with a status column. The Status Report is a weekly one-page summary you can share with stakeholders, with a red/yellow/green legend and a three-line narrative. The Kanban-Style sheet has columns for Backlog, Doing, Blocked, and Done, and is the right format for ongoing rather than time-boxed work. The Gantt-Lite is a visual timeline that fits on a single sheet for projects of up to twelve weeks. The Daily Standup sheet is sized for a small team's morning check-in with a three-line update per person (yesterday, today, blockers).
Every variant has a project name and one-line goal, an owner and key stakeholders list, a milestones-and-dates table, a risks-and-mitigations column, a weekly status legend, a budget or hours estimate, and a small notes block for the things that do not fit anywhere else. The risks-and-mitigations column is the part most people skip and most often regret skipping; even a half-filled risks list catches most of the predictable problems.
We design these for freelancers, small business owners, project managers, volunteers, students working on group projects, event planners, and wedding planners — because the project sheet of a wedding planner (with vendors, deposits, and a 12-month countdown) is genuinely different from the project sheet of a freelance designer (with phases, hours, and an invoice schedule). The differences are small but the right variant saves an hour a week of mental overhead.
What's typically inside a project planner printable
- A project name and one-line goal
- An owner and key stakeholders list
- A milestones-and-dates table
- A risks and mitigations column
- A weekly status legend (red / yellow / green)
- A budget or hours estimate
How to choose the right one
Pick a one-page project sheet for a personal project under a month. Pick a multi-page planner for cross-team work. Pick a weekly status report sheet if you are accountable to anyone.
A note on the underlying practice
Project management is the process of supervising the work of a team to achieve all project goals within the given constraints. This information is usually described in project documentation, created at the beginning of the development process. The primary constraints are scope, time and budget. The secondary challenge is to optimize the allocation of necessary inputs and apply them to meet predefined objectives.
Background context drawn from open Wikipedia summaries; the printables themselves are the editorial work of the PlannerNest team.
Related: a deeper guide to the methodology behind these printables.