It is very good and complete, but we need to learn how to use it. My advice would be to sign with another party because it is not easy. Its deployment and features are not easy. You need an explanation of a lot of things. I would rate it a seven out of ten because of the complexity of configuring simple things and the quality of their technical support.
IT Business Analyst at a manufacturing company with 11-50 employees
Real User
2022-05-17T07:07:00Z
May 17, 2022
I don't know how Planview Projectplace is deployed, because that is covered by the IT department. There are about one hundred users of Planview Projectplace within the company. It could be more than one hundred, but I'm unsure about the exact number of users. My advice to others who are looking to start using Planview Projectplace is to pay attention to their needs. First, they have to know what they need, in particular, for what purpose they want to use the solution. If they want a shared place for documentation, correspondence, etc., they can use Planview Projectplace. It would also depend on how many documents they have. If they want to use a solution for sharing some information with the team, I would recommend Basecamp because it draws more projects, then they can open and close those projects. If it's a matter of big projects that have durations of more than one month, and you need to go back to the history, or if it's a big application and you'll have several releases on it, then Planview Projectplace is a better solution for you in terms of tracking, for example, you can always go back to the documents that have been written years ago. If you want a solution for planning and looking into issues or defects, for example, project management for developers or IT projects with developers, Planview Projectplace is not the solution for you. It depends on the needs of your company. For IT projects, you can use Jira and Confluence. It's just a matter of needs. It would be awesome if you can have them all in one place, but I haven't found a tool, so far, that can cover everything. I'm rating Planview Projectplace eight out of ten, based on my needs. The solution is okay as it covers my needs in different ways.
If you want to drive adoption, my advice is to negotiate with Planview and get all of the licensing you need ahead of time, so you don't get nickel and dimed, choose some best practices for adopting any new project management tool and an agile tool, which means you start with a small group of people, win hearts and minds, and then extend it throughout the organization. It's one of the better tools that I have ever used. I would rate Planview Projectplace a seven out of ten.
The biggest lesson that I learned from using this product is that with the right tool, it is easy to meet deadlines and never miss an important milestone. I would rate this solution a nine out of ten.
Program Manager at a energy/utilities company with 501-1,000 employees
Real User
2021-11-26T17:54:38Z
Nov 26, 2021
I would absolutely recommend the system to other users. I am very pleased with the system right now. Based on the knowledge, and the experience that I have with other project management systems; I would rate Planview Projectplace an eight out of ten.
Manufacturing Manager, Capital COE at a manufacturing company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2021-10-01T16:14:00Z
Oct 1, 2021
I would rate ProjectPlace nine out of 10. However, before picking a solution, I would recommend doing some reference calls. I think doing reference calls with other companies can help you make a decision.
Project Manager at a manufacturing company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2020-09-21T06:33:00Z
Sep 21, 2020
Collaboration was not the focus of our organization. Once we started to use Projectplace we gave it to everybody in the team, from the junior engineers, lead engineers, tech leads, to directors, to have one single platform to have conversations. It enables them to tag people on cards and tells them who is responsible for what. It helped me bring accountability back into a project. I'm happy with Projectplace. I think Projectplace is the reason why Planview is surviving in my company. The scope is good, so people like it. I would rate Projectplace a nine out of ten.
You definitely have to have a plan. The templates are great to start out with, being able to build those workspaces fast, and then jumping in. It's very intuitive, sometimes when you're trying to learn other products, like JIRA, sometimes it's a little more confusing and it's hard to get that concept of what an issue type is and trying to understand how they integrate. Then, of course, they have a portfolio too, which makes it a little bit easier to view, but I think it's been great. I would rate Projectplace a nine out of ten. Not a ten because there is room for improvement with integration.
Strategist at a healthcare company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2020-09-17T08:06:00Z
Sep 17, 2020
Any department that's used it has seen the value. It's just the change of getting people to buy in, use it, and look at work in a different way. That's the key. Anyone who's used it has had a very positive experience, to my knowledge. It's very broad in terms of our organization of who's getting the value out of it. From an organizational perspective, the transparency and accountability across a project, and the work that needs to be done is just wonderful. There's a ton of value as an organization for the transparency and accountability of work that needs to be done. My advice would be to focus on the communication on the change side of it. The tool's awesome. It works. It's a wonderful tool, it's a great way to manage the work and do the work. I would rate Projectplace a nine out of ten. It's been a nice tool. I like seeing things visually as well. So I think it's the ability to have some detail, but the visualization of work and activities and things like that is very helpful and very powerful.
Getting work done is easy when your team has the best project management tools that enable traditional and accidental project managers to plan and execute work with their teams. Planview ProjectPlace offers a wide range of powerful work and project management tools that enable traditional and accidental project managers to plan and execute work with their teams, track progress in real time, and ultimately achieve goals.
It is very good and complete, but we need to learn how to use it. My advice would be to sign with another party because it is not easy. Its deployment and features are not easy. You need an explanation of a lot of things. I would rate it a seven out of ten because of the complexity of configuring simple things and the quality of their technical support.
I don't know how Planview Projectplace is deployed, because that is covered by the IT department. There are about one hundred users of Planview Projectplace within the company. It could be more than one hundred, but I'm unsure about the exact number of users. My advice to others who are looking to start using Planview Projectplace is to pay attention to their needs. First, they have to know what they need, in particular, for what purpose they want to use the solution. If they want a shared place for documentation, correspondence, etc., they can use Planview Projectplace. It would also depend on how many documents they have. If they want to use a solution for sharing some information with the team, I would recommend Basecamp because it draws more projects, then they can open and close those projects. If it's a matter of big projects that have durations of more than one month, and you need to go back to the history, or if it's a big application and you'll have several releases on it, then Planview Projectplace is a better solution for you in terms of tracking, for example, you can always go back to the documents that have been written years ago. If you want a solution for planning and looking into issues or defects, for example, project management for developers or IT projects with developers, Planview Projectplace is not the solution for you. It depends on the needs of your company. For IT projects, you can use Jira and Confluence. It's just a matter of needs. It would be awesome if you can have them all in one place, but I haven't found a tool, so far, that can cover everything. I'm rating Planview Projectplace eight out of ten, based on my needs. The solution is okay as it covers my needs in different ways.
If you want to drive adoption, my advice is to negotiate with Planview and get all of the licensing you need ahead of time, so you don't get nickel and dimed, choose some best practices for adopting any new project management tool and an agile tool, which means you start with a small group of people, win hearts and minds, and then extend it throughout the organization. It's one of the better tools that I have ever used. I would rate Planview Projectplace a seven out of ten.
The biggest lesson that I learned from using this product is that with the right tool, it is easy to meet deadlines and never miss an important milestone. I would rate this solution a nine out of ten.
I would absolutely recommend the system to other users. I am very pleased with the system right now. Based on the knowledge, and the experience that I have with other project management systems; I would rate Planview Projectplace an eight out of ten.
I would rate ProjectPlace nine out of 10. However, before picking a solution, I would recommend doing some reference calls. I think doing reference calls with other companies can help you make a decision.
Collaboration was not the focus of our organization. Once we started to use Projectplace we gave it to everybody in the team, from the junior engineers, lead engineers, tech leads, to directors, to have one single platform to have conversations. It enables them to tag people on cards and tells them who is responsible for what. It helped me bring accountability back into a project. I'm happy with Projectplace. I think Projectplace is the reason why Planview is surviving in my company. The scope is good, so people like it. I would rate Projectplace a nine out of ten.
You definitely have to have a plan. The templates are great to start out with, being able to build those workspaces fast, and then jumping in. It's very intuitive, sometimes when you're trying to learn other products, like JIRA, sometimes it's a little more confusing and it's hard to get that concept of what an issue type is and trying to understand how they integrate. Then, of course, they have a portfolio too, which makes it a little bit easier to view, but I think it's been great. I would rate Projectplace a nine out of ten. Not a ten because there is room for improvement with integration.
Any department that's used it has seen the value. It's just the change of getting people to buy in, use it, and look at work in a different way. That's the key. Anyone who's used it has had a very positive experience, to my knowledge. It's very broad in terms of our organization of who's getting the value out of it. From an organizational perspective, the transparency and accountability across a project, and the work that needs to be done is just wonderful. There's a ton of value as an organization for the transparency and accountability of work that needs to be done. My advice would be to focus on the communication on the change side of it. The tool's awesome. It works. It's a wonderful tool, it's a great way to manage the work and do the work. I would rate Projectplace a nine out of ten. It's been a nice tool. I like seeing things visually as well. So I think it's the ability to have some detail, but the visualization of work and activities and things like that is very helpful and very powerful.