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March 10, 2026·7 min read·asana, alternatives, growth, project-management

Asana Alternatives for Growing Teams

Asana is one of the most dependable tools in this category. Teams rarely leave it because it is bad. They leave it because their operations grew past what task management alone can hold.

I have a lot of respect for Asana. It is mature, stable, and genuinely well-designed for managing tasks and projects across teams. The model is clear, the timeline and board views are solid, and it scales to large organizations without falling over. If your need is coordinating work, Asana is a safe, strong default and I recommend it to plenty of people.

The reason growing teams look elsewhere is almost never a defect in Asana. It is that their operations expanded. The company that once just needed to track tasks now needs to manage customers, send and sign contracts, handle paperwork, and run HR, and Asana, by design, focuses on work management. The question becomes whether you keep adding tools around Asana or move to something broader.

What Asana gets right

Asana is reliable in the way that matters: it just works, day after day, for thousands of teams. The task model is clean, dependencies and timelines are well-implemented, and the product avoids the trap of overwhelming users with options. For pure project and task coordination, it is among the best, and that focus is a deliberate, defensible choice.

It also has a deep ecosystem of integrations, so for a long time you can extend it outward. That works well until the seams between all those integrations become their own maintenance project.

The growing-pains pattern

The signal that a team has grown past Asana is rarely a complaint about Asana itself. It is the slow accumulation of tools and manual handoffs around it.

  • A deal closes in your CRM and someone manually builds the matching project in Asana.
  • Contracts and signatures live in a separate tool, disconnected from the work they govern.
  • HR and people data sit in yet another system with no link to project assignments.
  • Reporting across customers, projects, and people means exporting from several tools.
  • You are maintaining integrations and zaps that break quietly and cost real time.

Add tools, or change the model

There are two honest paths from here. One is to keep Asana as your work hub and integrate best-of-breed tools around it for CRM, contracts, and HR. This preserves a product your team already likes and can be the right call if those other needs are light or if a department has strong preferences.

The other is to move to a single platform where work management is one part of a connected model that also covers customers, contracts, and people. You lose some of Asana familiarity; you gain the elimination of every manual handoff between those systems. Which is right depends on how heavy your non-work-management needs have become.

Choosing well

If you do consider a move, hold any alternative to Asana standard for the core: clean task and project management with reliable timelines and dependencies. A consolidated tool is only worth it if it matches Asana on the basics and adds the connected breadth you need. Do not trade reliability for features you will not use.

Where Atlas fits

Atlas keeps solid task and project management at its core but puts it on one data model with native CRM, contracts and e-signature, PDF Studio, HR, and Analytics. The closed deal becomes the project, so the handoff that Asana users do by hand simply disappears. We have an Asana importer, plus Free, Team at twelve dollars, and Enterprise plans. There is a deeper companion piece on moving from Asana specifically, and a fair comparison at /alternatives/asana. If Asana plus a couple of tools serves you well, stay; if the handoffs are multiplying, one model is worth a look.

Keep reading

  • AI for Business: A Practical Guide to Using AI at Work
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  • Workflow Management: Designing How Work Actually Flows
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FAQ

Questions, answered.

Is Asana good enough for a growing company?
For work management, yes, well into the hundreds of people. The question is whether your needs have spread into CRM, contracts, and HR. Asana focuses on work, so those usually mean additional tools and manual handoffs around it.
Should I integrate around Asana or replace it?
Both are valid. Integrate if your non-work needs are light or a team strongly prefers Asana. Replace with a single model if you are tired of recreating projects from deals and maintaining brittle integrations.
Does moving from Asana lose my project history?
No. Atlas imports Asana projects and tasks, and you can keep Asana as a read-only archive during the transition. The main work is consolidating data from the surrounding tools into one model.

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