The task app you already bought four times

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Open most small businesses and you’ll find the same thing. Someone’s running their personal to-dos in To Do. The team’s tracking a project on a Planner board. A manager’s got a Trello tab open. And somebody just expensed a Monday.com seat.

Four tools. One job. Nobody can see the whole picture.

Here’s what most people missed. Microsoft quietly folded To Do, the old Planner, Tasks in Teams and Project for the web into a single app — and just called it Planner. One place. No new licence.

That’s not a rebrand. That’s four subscriptions your clients can stop paying for.

And if they’re on a Microsoft 365 Business plan, they already own it.

What is the new Planner, really?

Think of it as one task list that finally spans the messy middle between “remind me to call the accountant” and “ship the office move by March”.

At the bottom sits your personal stuff — the same tasks that used to live in To Do, now showing up under My Tasks and My Day. In the middle are shared plans your team works from together. At the top, if you ever need it, full project scheduling with timelines and dependencies.

Same app. You just go as deep as the job needs.

Here’s the real win for an SMB. The thing you were about to buy Asana for? It’s the middle tier, and it’s already switched on.

Step-by-Step: putting tasks where the work happens

The mistake is opening Planner as its own app and treating it like another silo. Don’t. Put it where the team already talks.

Find the app

In Microsoft Teams, click Apps on the left rail, search for Planner, and add it. Until April 2024 this was the clunkily-named “Tasks by Planner and To Do” — same app, now just Planner. You’ll also find it on the web at planner.cloud.microsoft if you want it in its own tab.

Pin it to a channel

This is the step that changes everything. Open the channel where the team already works — say your client’s Marketing channel — click the + at the top, and add a Planner tab.

Now the plan lives inside the conversation. No app-switching. No “where’s that board again”. The tasks sit right next to the chat about them.

Build the plan

Create a plan, add a few buckets — To Do, Doing, Done works fine — and start dropping in tasks. Assign people, set due dates, done.

Know which tier you’re on

This is where people get nervous about cost. They shouldn’t. Here’s the line:

Included with Microsoft 365:  Grid, Board, Schedule, Charts
Needs a paid Planner plan:    Timeline, People, Goals, dependencies, sprints

Notice what’s missing? There’s no licence to buy for the everyday stuff. Boards, grids, a schedule view and basic charts are all in the box. You only pay if a client genuinely needs Gantt charts and dependencies — and most never will. The admin documentation spells out exactly what sits where.

Why this actually changes behaviour

“Which app has the project in it again?”

When that question disappears, something shifts.

Tasks stop being scattered across four tools and start living in one place the team already opens fifty times a day. Your personal to-dos, your team’s plans, even your old Project schedules — one pane.

For an MSP, this is a quietly brilliant client conversation. You’re not selling anything new. You’re showing them they’ve been paying a third party for something Microsoft already bundles. That builds trust faster than any upsell ever will.

And the migration worry? There isn’t much of one. Your old Planner boards are already there. To Do items flow in on their own. Project for the web has been retired straight into Planner. You’re not moving anything — it already moved.

If you’re rolling out Microsoft 365 and you’re not showing clients this, you’re leaving them to pay for Trello out of habit.

The new Planner isn’t there to give your clients another task app. It’s there to let them close the other three.

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