Also known as: Item priority
An item’s priority indicates the urgency with which the team should approach it.
Here are the priority levels:
Blocker: Highest priority. This item usually represents a serious obstacle that urgently needs to be resolved, effectively blocking other workstreams from progressing.
Critical: Very high priority. Typically, this represents a critical piece of work that the team should prioritize urgently before working on less critical items.
High priority: Items with high priority are flagged as more important to resolve than typical items.
Normal priority: This represents items with typical priority, neither high nor low (this is the default priority).
Low priority: Items with lower priority are less important compared to items with normal priority or higher.
Lowest priority: This represents an item with very low priority.
Flagged: A flagged item (or, more accurately, an item with the priority of ‘Flagged’) can be used by teams to signify the importance of an item over others and visually mark it without necessarily implying high or low priority. In practice, teams typically decide internally what the flagged property means to them.
Also known as: Item priority
An item’s priority indicates the urgency with which the team should approach it.
Here are the priority levels:
Blocker: Highest priority. This item usually represents a serious obstacle that urgently needs to be resolved, effectively blocking other workstreams from progressing.
Critical: Very high priority. Typically, this represents a critical piece of work that the team should prioritize urgently before working on less critical items.
High priority: Items with high priority are flagged as more important to resolve than typical items.
Normal priority: This represents items with typical priority, neither high nor low (this is the default priority).
Low priority: Items with lower priority are less important compared to items with normal priority or higher.
Lowest priority: This represents an item with very low priority.
Flagged: A flagged item (or, more accurately, an item with the priority of ‘Flagged’) can be used by teams to signify the importance of an item over others and visually mark it without necessarily implying high or low priority. In practice, teams typically decide internally what the flagged property means to them.