Project Management
Manage projects, tasks, and priorities effectively as a solopreneur. Use when organizing work, tracking progress, managing deadlines, coordinating with contr...
Manage projects, tasks, and priorities effectively as a solopreneur. Use when organizing work, tracking progress, managing deadlines, coordinating with contr...
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As a solopreneur, you are the project manager by default. Without structure, tasks pile up, deadlines get missed, and progress stalls. This playbook gives you lightweight project management systems that keep you organized and moving forward — without the overhead of enterprise PM tools and processes.
You need one source of truth for all work. Pick a system that fits your workflow.
System comparison:
| System | Best For | Complexity | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pen + Paper / Bullet Journal | Analog lovers, very simple workflows | Very Low | $5 (notebook) |
| Todo list app (Todoist, Things) | Personal tasks, simple workflows | Low | Free-$5/mo |
| Kanban board (Trello, Notion) | Visual thinkers, multi-stage workflows | Low-Medium | Free-$10/mo |
| Project tool (Asana, ClickUp, Notion) | Multiple projects, client work, collaboration | Medium-High | Free-$20/mo |
| Spreadsheet (Google Sheets, Airtable) | Custom workflows, data-driven tracking | Medium | Free |
Selection criteria:
Recommendation: Start simple (Todoist or Trello). Add complexity only when simple stops working.
Hierarchy:
AREA (broad life/business domain) ↓ PROJECT (has a defined end state) ↓ TASK (single action, completable in one session) ↓ SUBTASK (optional, breaks task into smaller steps)
Example:
AREA: Marketing PROJECT: Launch email nurture sequence TASK: Write 5 emails for sequence SUBTASK: Draft email 1 SUBTASK: Draft email 2 [...] TASK: Design email templates in tool TASK: Set up automation triggers TASK: Test sequence with dummy contact
Project definition rules:
Active project limit: As a solopreneur, keep 3-5 active projects max. More than that and progress stalls on everything.
Not all tasks are equal. Use the Eisenhower Matrix to decide what to do now, later, delegate, or delete.
The Matrix:
Urgent | | Important | DO FIRST (Q1) | SCHEDULE (Q2) | | -----------|---------------|------------------ | DELEGATE (Q3) | DELETE (Q4) Not | | Important | |
Quadrants:
How to use:
Most solopreneurs over-invest in Q1 and Q3, under-invest in Q2. Strategic work (Q2) is what scales your business. Protect time for it.
Weekly planning keeps you aligned with goals and prevents reactive firefighting.
Weekly planning template (15-30 min):
Pick 3 most important outcomes for the week. Not tasks — outcomes.
Bad: "Work on marketing" Good: "Publish 2 blog posts and schedule 5 social posts"
For each priority, block specific time on your calendar.
Example:
Monday 9-11am: Draft blog post 1 Tuesday 9-11am: Draft blog post 2 Wednesday 2-4pm: Edit both posts, schedule social posts
List everything else that needs attention this week. Categorize into:
Rule: If it's not scheduled, it won't happen. Protect time for your top 3 priorities FIRST, then fit other work around them.
Start each day with a 5-10 min planning session.
Daily planning template:
Daily task list structure:
TODAY'S TOP PRIORITY: [The one task that must get done] Time: [When you'll do it]SECONDARY TASKS:
- [Task 2] — Time: [When]
- [Task 3] — Time: [When]
IF TIME PERMITS:
[Nice-to-have task]
[Low-priority task]
End-of-day ritual (5 min):
For larger projects (2+ weeks), break them into phases to maintain progress visibility.
Project planning template:
PROJECT: [Name] GOAL: [What does success look like?] DEADLINE: [Target completion date] OWNER: [You, or if delegated, who]PHASES: Phase 1: [Name] (Target: Week 1) - Task 1 - Task 2 - Task 3
Phase 2: [Name] (Target: Week 2) - Task 4 - Task 5
Phase 3: [Name] (Target: Week 3) - Task 6 - Task 7
STATUS: [Not Started / In Progress / Blocked / Done] BLOCKERS: [What's preventing progress?] NOTES: [Context, links, decisions]
Weekly project check-in:
When working with clients or contractors, visibility and communication are critical.
Client project board structure (use Trello or Notion):
COLUMNS: - Backlog (tasks not started) - In Progress (you're actively working on it) - Review (waiting for client feedback) - Done (completed and approved)CARD STRUCTURE (per task):
Title: [Deliverable name]
Due date: [When]
Assigned to: [You or contractor]
Description: [What needs to be delivered]
Attachments: [Files, links, references]
Checklist: [Sub-steps]
Comments: [Client feedback, notes]
Client communication rules:
Project management isn't just about task lists. It's about learning and improving over time.
Monthly review (30 min):
Key metrics to track (optional but valuable):
Rule: If you're consistently missing deadlines or priorities, the system isn't working. Simplify or adjust.
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