Interior design projects move through many stages, each with its own tasks, dependencies and deadlines. Designers balance concept development, sourcing, documentation, client feedback, supplier communication and installation timelines, often across multiple active projects. Without a clear workflow, details slip, tasks stall and teams lose time retracing decisions.
A kanban board offers a practical way to bring order to this complexity. It uses a visual layout of columns and cards to show the different stages of a project and where individual tasks sit in each stage. For interior designers, this type of visual project management supports the way studios naturally think and work. It clarifies responsibilities, reduces back-and-forth communication and creates a shared view of progress across the entire team.
Unlike static lists or scattered spreadsheets, a kanban board changes as the project moves, making it easy to stay aligned during busy phases. Programa offers kanban board views of projects, to help studios plan, track and review tasks with the same level of precision they expect from their specifications and schedules. In this guide, we explore how designers can use a kanban board to manage projects more effectively and what features matter most for design practice.




