When you've thought through your plan, express it in one or more planning
folders.
-
Click Tracker in the project navigation bar.
-
Under Planning Folders, click the folder in which you
want to create a new planning folder, then click
New.
-
Give your planning folder a brief and descriptive name.
For example:
- In an agile project, you'll probably want two or more iterations. Make a
planning folder called "Sprint 1," another called "Sprint 2," and so
on.
- In a phased, waterfall-style project, you might name your first planning
folder "Design," the next "Build," and so on.
Tip: Don't worry if you don't have anything of interest to put into
your planning folders yet. The parallel process of filling out the feature
tree will provide plenty of material for this.
-
Use the Description to briefly signal the kind of work
that will be contained in this planning folder.
Include enough information to help people get up to speed quickly whey they
join your project. But save most of the detail for the individual tracker
artifacts, where project members will spend most of their time.
-
For Status, select a value that communicates where the
planning folder is in its life cycle.
For a new planning folder, you'll probably want to select Not
started.
Tip: You can create more values to choose from
in your Project Settings.
-
If you have set up a file release in the File Releases tool to deliver the work
you are tracking here, you can identify it in the File
Release field.
Any artifact you add to this planning folder will also appear in the
Planned Tracker Artifacts tab when you look at that
file release.
-
For Capacity, provide a number that expresses how much
work your team thinks it can do in the period represented by this planning
folder.
Tip: When you create a new planning folder, it can be a good idea
to set its capacity to zero until you get a feel for the artifacts and
resources you are working with.
-
Select a start and end date for the work that this planning folder will
contain.
You can change these dates at any time. However, it's important to specify dates
even if they're not firm, because useful visual aids and reports depend on them.