When you start outsourcing tasks in your online business, you quickly discover that email is a terrible project management system. I learned this the hard way years ago when I had close to ten virtual assistants working on various parts of my business — programming, web design, content writing, link building, transcription — and trying to track it all through email and Google Docs spreadsheets was a disaster.

That experience sent me on a search for project management software, which I originally wrote about back in 2010. The tool I reviewed at the time was called 5PM (5PMWeb.com), a simple web-based project manager. That tool is no longer around, but the lessons I learned about choosing the right project management tool are more relevant than ever.

What I Needed Then (and What You Probably Need Now)

The first and most important step in choosing project management software is understanding what you actually need. When I was evaluating tools, I quickly realized what I did not need: complicated Gantt charts, time tracking, invoicing, and enterprise-level features. What I needed was simple: a way to organize tasks by project, assign them to people, and communicate about those tasks without losing context in email threads.

If you are a solo entrepreneur or running a small team of contractors, you probably need the same thing. Do not fall into the trap of choosing a tool because it has the most features. Choose the tool that matches how you actually work.

Project Management Tools Worth Considering in 2026

The landscape has changed dramatically since I first wrote about this topic. Here is what I recommend looking at today, depending on your situation.

Trello is still one of the simplest options available. Its card-and-board system is intuitive, the free tier is generous, and it works well for managing a small number of projects with a few collaborators. If you want a glorified task list that understands the idea of projects — which is exactly what I was looking for back in 2010 — Trello is hard to beat.

Asana has a free tier that supports up to 10 users and handles both list-based and board-based project views. It is more structured than Trello, with better support for due dates, dependencies, and project templates. If you are managing multiple VAs across several projects, Asana gives you more visibility into who is doing what.

Notion has become the Swiss Army knife of productivity tools. It combines project management, documentation, and note-taking in one platform. The learning curve is steeper, but if you like having everything in one place, Notion is worth exploring.

ClickUp offers an aggressive free tier with more features than most paid tools. It can be overwhelming at first, but if you want a tool that can grow with your business, it is a solid choice.

The Lesson That Has Not Changed

The specific tools come and go. 5PM is gone. Basecamp has pivoted multiple times. Free tools from 2010 have either shut down or been acquired. But the underlying principle remains: once you have more than two or three people helping in your business, you need a system to track the work. Email will not cut it.

Pick a tool that is simple enough that you will actually use it. Get your team on it. Make it the single source of truth for what needs to happen, who is doing it, and when it is due. The tool matters far less than the habit of using it consistently.

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