Using Asana for Kanban
Exceptionally intuitive and visually clean interface — one of the lowest onboarding friction tools for non-technical teams. When combined with Kanban, this makes Asana a strong candidate for teams who want a structured, repeatable workflow without sacrificing flexibility. Kanban works best in Asana when you leverage its kanban boards, custom workflows to implement the framework's key practices directly in the tool your team already lives in.
Kanban visualises work as cards flowing through defined stages. Work is pulled (not pushed) when capacity allows, and WIP limits prevent bottlenecks.
How to set up Kanban in Asana
Create a Kanban board with explicit column definitions
In Asana, create a new board view for your project. Define columns that represent your actual workflow stages — not generic To Do / Done. Example: Backlog → Defined → In Design → In Dev → In Review → Done. Write down the entry/exit criteria for each column.
Set WIP limits per column
Add a custom field to track WIP count, or use Asana's built-in WIP limit feature if available. The standard starting point: limit In Progress to the number of team members × 1.5. Enforce limits in team norms first; automate enforcement later.
Define your service classes and priority lanes
In Asana, create a "Class of Service" custom field with values: Standard, Expedite (urgent/blocking), Fixed Date (regulatory/contractual), and Intangible (technical debt, improvement). Expedite items get a dedicated swimlane on the board.
Instrument cycle time and throughput measurement
Enable Asana's analytics to track cycle time (time from "In Progress" to "Done") and throughput (items completed per week). Review these metrics in a weekly 15-minute team flow review — Kanban replaces sprint ceremonies with continuous metrics-driven review.
Which Asana features matter for Kanban
Asana has 2 of 2 core Kanban features natively.