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How to Group Your Work by Project in Vyneron

Vyneron Team·

When you're juggling more than one big thing — a product launch, a house move, a client engagement — you don't want their tasks tangled together in one giant list. You want to be able to say "show me just the launch" and see only that. That's what projects do in Vyneron.

A project is a single home for a body of work: assign tasks, notes, and routines to it, then filter your workspace down to that project whenever you want to focus.

TL;DR: Create a project, assign tasks, notes, and routines to it, and use the project picker to filter your view to just that project. Routines you create under a project stay in it automatically. Deleting a project never deletes its items — they simply become unassigned.

Projects vs. labels — when to use which

Both organize, but differently — and they work together:

  • A project is a container: a task belongs to one project (its home). Use projects for distinct bodies of work you switch between.
  • A label is a cross-cut: a task can carry many labels (client, context, priority). Use labels for dimensions that apply across projects.

Rule of thumb: which launch? → project. Is it urgent / whose is it / what context? → labels. A task can be in "Q3 Launch" (project) and tagged "urgent" + "design" (labels) at the same time.

How to use projects

1. Create a project

Give it a name — "Q3 Launch," "Home Reno," "Client A." That's it.

2. Assign your work

Set the project on a task, note, or routine when you create or edit it. Anything without one stays under No Project, so nothing gets lost.

3. Filter to focus

Use the project picker to narrow your whole workspace to a single project — tasks, notes, and routines for that effort, nothing else. Switch projects to switch context cleanly.

4. Routines inherit automatically

Create a recurring routine inside a project and it stays in that project — so a project's recurring rituals (a weekly status update, a monthly review) live alongside its one-off tasks.

What happens when you delete a project

Deleting a project is safe: its tasks and notes don't disappear — they just become unassigned (back to No Project). So you can wind down a finished project without worrying about losing the work or its history.

A few honest notes

  • One project per item. A task lives in a single project (its home). For the "this belongs to several things" case, reach for labels instead.
  • MVP today. This first version is about grouping and focus. Deeper team features (per-project access roles) are planned for later — for now, projects are a clean way to keep your own work separated.

Projects are part of a larger June update — see What's New in Vyneron for everything that shipped, or combine projects with labels for organizing both across and within your work. Try it free.

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