<> You just hit one of my hot buttons. For many defects, Tech Support frequently tells me the product is working as designed and if I want to submit a product request, I can do that. I ask them, seriously? Someone intentionally designed the Gantt Chart so that when you specify a sort order in the report layout, the Gantt Chart orders everything in random order? That is a requirement that was documented and then coded as designed? I asked what randomizing routine did the product manager specify? No reply. They want me to submit a new product feature request to get the Gantt Chart to sort in the order I specify? Back in the old days, pre-Anaconda (you old-timers know what I mean), you could upload a MS Project Plan to an existing AtTask project and AtTask would figure out what the differences were between the new MS Project plan and the existing AtTask plan. We had so many difficulties with AtTask back in the dark ages, we did all of the detailed project planning in MS Project, updated the project plan in AtTask, and then did all the cool reporting and timekeeping from AtTask. At some point in 2013, I think it was, they took that capability out, maybe as part of moving to the Anaconda release. Ah, the good old days of paying for two project management tools ☺ What I have asked for (long ago) was the ability to save a project with a baseline (or snapshot or backup, whatever), and then later make that baseline plan the current plan. That way, you could save a snapshot of the project plan, expenses, everything, and later, restore that snapshot if you needed to. It should ask you want elements of the backup/snapshot/baseline to restore - tasks, issues, risks, actual hours, expenses, you know the usual objects. That would allow us to keep backups and if the indentation of my plan gets completely messed up, I can restore from a previous snapshot. That would be far more desirable to me than allowing MS Project plans to be used to update a WorkFront plan. I don’t want to pay for two PM tools. Regarding project plans of thousands of tasks, I’d step back and look at the WBS approach being used. I’ve run a few projects that had more tasks than MS Project could handle (back in the day, MSProject was limited to 10K tasks). I might submit that projects over 500 or so tasks become leviathans, difficult to change, difficult to find anything in, difficult to understand, positively indigestible. I prefer following a WBS strategy that decomposes the project into major and minor deliverables, and then create project plans to create individual deliverables. That strategy, however, requires certain technical capabilities in the PM tool. Cross project predecessors are a must (which WorkFront has). What I’d really like to see is the ability to roll up a project into a parent project (I hate to say it, well, I’d like WorkFront to roll up subprojects like MS Project does). The subproject would roll up as a single line item into the parent. You could expand the single line item in the parent project and look into (and edit) the subproject. That way, I can manage a large effort at different levels of abstraction. I can also manage a large effort where subprojects are being managed by other Project managers. That would be a really nifty capability to add to WorkFront. I think that would have general PM appeal across most industries and functional areas. I’m not going to mention how great it would be for Marketing ☺ Thanks for your thoughts, Vern. You really got me thinking there… Eric ________________________________