Hill Charts: see where
projects really stand.

A Basecamp exclusive way to track progress.

For years we’ve used Basecamp To-Dos to track our own work here at Basecamp. But for bigger projects with dozens or hundreds of tasks, you need a way to see the bigger picture. Is the project going to be done on time? Are people stuck?

To solve this problem, we built an entirely new idea into Basecamp To-Dos. It’s a 10,000-foot view of projects that answers the hard questions about where things really stand. Introducing the Hill Chart:

a Hill Chart in Basecamp

The idea: work is like a hill

Every piece of work has two phases. First there’s an uphill phase where you figure out your approach. You have a basic idea about the task, but you haven’t figured out what the solution is going to look like or how to solve all the unknowns.

Eventually you reach a point where there aren’t any more unsolved problems. That’s like standing at the top of the hill. You can see clearly all the way down the other side. Then the downhill phase is just about execution.

the uphill and downhill phases of a project

A Hill Chart from a real project

All of our development projects are made of a set of To-Do Lists. We create a To-Do List for each piece of work that we can make progress on independently.

adding a to-do list to a Hill Chart

Now to track progress, we turn on Hill Chart tracking for each list. This will reveal a Hill Chart on the top of the To-Dos screen with a dot for the list we’re tracking.

adding a to-do list to a Hill Chart

After adding a few more lists, we click Update on the Hill Chart and drag the dots for those lists into position.

Now anybody who checks on the project can see the status of these three lists. Two of them are over the hill — full of certainty, with just execution left. One is still on the uphill slope, which means there are unsolved problems or open questions.

Note how that the status is human generated, not computer generated. This reflects a real person’s feeling of the work at this moment. And because the status is attached to lists instead of individual to-dos, we get a big picture view of all the work.

Checking in on progress over time

Every time someone updates the Hill Chart, a new snapshot is saved to the project’s history. This gives managers a ton of context about what’s moving on the project and what isn’t without peppering the team with questions.

Updates can be annotated with commentary, and you can even comment on or Boost someone else’s Hill Chart update. This enables a new level of fast, asynchronous communication about high-level progress on projects.

More well-defined work

Sometimes trying to position a list on the Hill Chart helps you to better structure the work. On a recent project we were building a feature to notify people when an Event was rescheduled.

That dot sat there for a few days without moving. Why weren’t we making progress? After a short talk with the team, we realized that it was unclear where to place the dot because part of the work was figured out and part wasn’t. The back-end work was solved, but there was some design work that we hadn’t figured out. So where should the dot go?

In a case like this, the hill is telling us to break up the list. We renamed the original list to “Notification: Delivery” and moved it over the hill to show where it really stood. Then we created two separate lists to track the front-end work that was still uphill.

Redefining the To-Do Lists made it easier to see what was actually going on in the project and what needed to be done next.

From unknown to known, and known to done

Since we adopted the Hill Chart internally at Basecamp, our teams have been communicating about progress at a level never before possible. Our intuition is the same, but now we have a way to immediately show each other where things stand.

And because of the Hill Chart history, we don’t need to call meetings to catch up on a project’s status. It’s no longer a challenge to see what’s in motion and what’s stuck. We can have quick, substantial conversations asynchronously about where to focus next or how to break up a problem.

Try the Hill Chart on your next Basecamp project. To use it, navigate to any To-Do List and choose “Track this on the Hill Chart” from the Options menu (•••) in the top-right corner.

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