Add project roles to your templates, so you can automatically assign work to the right person—even if your team changes.
Asana has two powerhouse work standardization features, templates and bundles. If you’ve heard of these tools before, you might be thinking: “aren’t templates and bundles the same thing?” (Or you’re scratching your head in confusion, in which case stay tuned). But while these features seem similar at first glance, they’re actually incredibly different—and understanding them can help you unlock serious productivity gains.
In this article we outline the unique benefits and use-cases for both templates and bundles. You’ll learn when to use them, how to use them, and why they’re game changers for your team’s productivity.
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Before we dive in, let’s take a moment to clarify what templates and bundles are designed to do in Asana.
Templates help you kickstart work at the beginning of an initiative. There are two types of templates:
Project templates let you launch entire initiatives with a click. Just pick a project template, and Asana takes care of the test—automatically creating a project and pre-filling tasks, assignees, due dates, automations, and more. You can design your own project templates, choose existing ones from our template library, or convert your favorite projects into templates with a single click.
Task templates are similar to project templates, but on a smaller scale. They’re ready-made blueprints for individual tasks. When you use a task template, Asana automatically spins up the task name, description, custom fields, subtasks, and more.
And here’s the important part: changing a template only impacts future projects or tasks you create. It doesn’t retroactively change any existing work.
Meanwhile, a bundle is a collection of workflow features you can apply across different projects. For example, a bundle can specify project sections, custom fields to add, rules to apply, and task templates to use in a project.
Unlike templates, you can apply bundles at any point in the project lifecycle—not just when you’re kicking off work. And updating a bundle impacts ALL of the projects it’s applied to, both retroactively and in the future.
Features to use: Project and task templates
If your goal is to kick off work quickly, templates are your best friend. With templates, you don’t have to spend time figuring out timelines, deliverables, and workflows for a new project or task. There’s already a predetermined blueprint that includes all of that information. You can just select the template you want to use, and Asana will take care of the rest.
Templates work best for repeatable, time-bound work. In other words, they’re ideal for projects that happen more than once and have a standard set of deliverables and due dates each time. This includes processes like:
Take employee onboarding, for example. You can create a custom employee onboarding template that includes every step new hires should complete, plus the timeline for each. When your hire starts, use the template to automatically spin up an employee onboarding project to guide them through their first weeks.
Feature to use: Bundles
Bundles are your go-to tool for process standardization. Every bundle is a group of steps, tools, and organization features that make up a process. And since you can apply bundles to many projects at once—including new and existing initiatives—they’re a powerful tool to roll out consistent workflows.
The best part? When you update a bundle, it updates every existing project your bundle is applied to. That means you can update workflows in one place and instantly apply those changes across your organization.
This is especially useful for evergreen projects with processes that might evolve over time, like:
Creative requests
Agile sprints
Content calendars
Bug tracking
Customer feedback tracking
Work requests
Procurement
For example, imagine you want to standardize creative request workflows across your company. You can create a bundle that includes:
Project sections for organizing requests
Custom fields for labeling and sorting work
Rules for automatically assigning, moving, and updating requests
Task templates for different request types (like writing requests, visual requests, etc.)
Apply that bundle to any project that involves creative requests. If you need to update your process later—like to add a new review step—just make changes to your bundle and instantly apply them across your projects.
Features to use: Project templates or bundles
This one can go either way—it just depends on how and when you want to apply new automation steps.
Project templates work best if you only want to apply automations to future work, and you don’t anticipate needing to change or update your processes. For example, you can create a product launch template that automates routine steps in your workflow—like instantly setting due dates, assigning work to stakeholders, and creating rules to organize work. For every product launch, you can quickly spin up a new project that includes all of these time-saving automations.
Bundles work best if you want to retroactively apply automation steps to existing projects. For example, imagine you already have a set of existing product launch projects. You can create a bundle to automate steps in your product launch workflow, then apply that bundle to each of your existing initiatives.
Feature to use: Project templates
For processes with standard roles and timelines, project templates are a handy way to automatically assign tasks and set deadlines for new initiatives. That’s because templates let you specify a whole set of deliverables for every project, including the due date for each task and who’s responsible. With project templates, you can:
Pre-fill a set of tasks, including details like task titles, descriptions, subtasks, and custom fields.
Set dynamic timelines according to your project’s start date or end date, with the option to skip weekends.
Create project roles to automatically assign work to the right person, even if your team changes.
Features to use: Project templates or bundles
Either project templates or bundles can apply here, depending on how much detail you want to repurpose.
Project templates are ideal if you want to repurpose an initiative that includes a detailed set of tasks. For example, imagine you’re creating a template from an existing marketing launch project. You can incorporate every individual deliverable into your template, along with task titles, descriptions, subtasks, and more.
Bundles work best if you don’t need to repurpose specific tasks but rather the broader framework of a project. Using the same marketing launch example, you can reuse the overall workflow for new launches—like project sections, rules, custom fields, and task templates. That means you can organize and automate tasks the same way, but you won’t have a pre-filled list of deliverables to work from.
Templates and bundles are worth getting to know. By spending just a bit of time learning about these tools, you can unlock hours of time savings for yourself and your team. And whether you’re launching new initiatives or looking to bring consistency into ongoing projects, there’s a tailored solution for you.
Visit our pricing page to learn more and sign up for a free trial. For a deep dive into how to use each feature, check out our Asana Academy courses on templates and bundles.
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