- What does Asana do:
- Asana is a project management platform that helps professionals to stay focused on the goals, projects, and tasks—no matter when or where the work happens.
- Launch year: November 2011
- Company Name: Asana, Inc.
- Headquarters: San Francisco, CA
- Founder(s): Dustin Moskovitz, Justin Rosenstein
- CEO of Asana: Dustin Moskovitz
- Total Number of Asana employees: 500+
- Asana’s revenue: $100 Million in annual revenue
- Number of paid customers: 50,000 paying Customers
- Organisations that use Asana: 75,000 organizations
- Countries that Asana has users in: 195 Countries
- Top Country for Asana usage: United States
- Funding raised so far: $213.2 Million
- Asana’s reported valuation: $1.5 billion
- Top 5 Competitors or similar products: ProofHub, Zoho Projects, Liquid Planner, Basecamp and ClickUp
- Asana History: Moskovitz and Rosenstein left Facebook to start Asana
- Free plan: Asana is free for teams of up to 15 users. There are no limits on the number of tasks you can create or on file attachments for tasks. No access to get timeline view or custom dashboard in free plans
- What makes Asana interesting: Analytics for effective reporting of team activity
- Companies that use Asana by industry: Computer Software, Education, Marketing & advertising, IT, Hospital, NGO, Real Estate, Retail and Internet
- Top integrations to keep connected with Asana: File storage and sharing, Email, Chat, Team-specific integrations, Asana integrates with both Slack and Microsoft Teams, zoom chat integration in the Zoom App Marketplace
- Awards:
- Asana has been ranked as 13th software solution in the top 20 software products of 2020 on Crozdesk
- Great Place to Work and FORTUNE ranked Asana as the #1 Best Small and Medium Workplace in the Bay Area
- Criticism: Asana has been criticized by users for not user friendly for new users. Tasks can be allocated to single person and there is no time tracking feature
+ One interesting news:
Families in indefinite lockdown are turning to Asana to run their households.
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