A tracker is a single place where tasks, issues, and updates are organized.
Without it, you’ll keep asking:
-
- Where are we?
- Who is doing what
- What’s delayed?
With it, you can clearly see:
- What was planned on Monday.
- What has been updated by Friday.
- Where problems or delays exist.
Google Sheets is free, simple, and allows real-time collaboration. That’s why we use it.
How to Do It
You’ll need three kinds of trackers in your Google Sheet:
- Weekly Tracker → For tasks in progress this week.
- Backlog → For tasks that will be done later.
- Issue Log → For problems you discover during testing, meetings, WhatsApp chats, emails, or calls.
Each tracker lives on its own tab inside the same sheet.
Checklist for Building Your Tracker
- Open a new Google Sheet and rename it: [Project Name] Tracker.
- Add 3 tabs: Weekly Tracker, Backlog, Issue Log.
- Add columns (Task, Responsibility, Start Date, Due Date, Status, Test Status, Priority, Notes).
- Use dropdowns for Status (To Do, In Progress, Completed) and Test Status (Tested, Blocked, Kickback, Not Tested).
- Fill in sample tasks/issues so you and your team can practice updating it.
- Share the sheet with the team (Commenter or Editor access).
Examples
- Weekly Tracker Example:
- Design Homepage – John – 01/15 – 01/20 – In Progress – Not Tested – High – Awaiting review.
- Backlog Example:
- Refactor Payment API – Jane – Medium – Blocked until requirements are clear.
- Issue Log Example:
- Login button unresponsive – Found during Exploratory Testing – 01/18 – Dev Team – Open.


