About the editors
AsanaTracker Review is an independent buyer-side guide to using Asana as a work tracking platform. We write for teams that are evaluating Asana against alternatives, configuring it for the first time, or trying to get more out of a plan they already pay for.
Who runs the site
The site is edited by Saskia Linwood, Senior Editor, with contributions from working operations leads and project managers who use Asana day to day. Our reviewers focus on practical setup, plan-tier trade-offs, and the gaps that show up after the first 90 days of use — the period when most procurement decisions reveal whether they were right or wrong.
How we evaluate Asana features
Every page is built on Asana's published documentation, plan pages, and patterns visible in public user reviews. We treat the platform as an evaluation framework, not a benchmark — we describe how features work, where they help, and where they stop, without claiming hands-on usage tests we didn't run.
- Pricing and feature limits are verified against Asana's published pages on a dated cadence; check the
data/_facts.jsonreference inside each article for the verification date. - When a feature is plan-gated, we say which tier unlocks it.
- When we recommend an alternative, we explain the specific dimension on which it beats Asana.
What we don't do
We don't run paid placements disguised as editorial. We don't claim to have run benchmarks or hands-on tests we haven't actually run. We don't recommend Asana when an alternative is clearly the better choice for the buyer profile.
Corrections and updates
Asana ships product changes on a regular cadence; pricing and feature availability can move quietly. If you spot a number that has drifted, an integration that has changed, or a tier feature that has shifted, send a note to [email protected] and we'll re-verify.