►
Description
This video is Project Management How to Part 3 of 3
Part 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9W4oxjdAwUs
Part 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uw249U2U34w
GitLab Handbook for the Marketing Department's guidelines for using GitLab project management: https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/marketing/project-management-guidelines/
A
Oh
hello,
my
name
is
William
I'm
part
of
the
product,
marketing
team
etiquette
lab
and
in
this
video
I'd
like
to
tell
you
about
some,
how
to
use
some
product
manage
some
project
management
parts
of
gitlab
in
particular.
Let's
take
a
look
at
issues,
labels
and
issue
boards,
so
to
show
you
how
I
use
these
and
how
you
might
be
able
to
as
well
here
is
an
issue.
I'm
working
on
an
issue
is
a
discrete
unit
of
work.
A
This
is
a
deliverable,
something
you
need
to
get
done
and
in
this
case,
I
need
to
do
a
kickoff
for
my
market
requirements
for
get-ups,
and
this
issue
is
where
I
capture
that
work
I
define
what
needs
to
be
done
and
I
can
collaborate
with
others
by
adding
comments
and
add
related
issues,
etc.
In
a
previous
video,
I
talked
about
epics
and
milestones,
and
so
in
this
video
I
want
to
talk
about
the
labels
now
think
of
labels
as
a
way
to
categorize
your
issues
in
other
types
of
software
that
I've
used.
A
Sometimes
this
concept
is
called
a
category.
Sometimes
this
concept
is
called
a
tag,
or
maybe
sometimes
this
concept
is
called
a
folder.
You
might
be
able
to
think
of
everything
you
stick
in
a
folder
if
I
want
to
put
all
these
issues
of
work
into
a
folder,
maybe
but
think
of
it
more
like
how
do
I
want
to
categorize
these
or
how
do
I
want
to
tag
these,
and
so
these
are
some
labels
that
I
have
applied
to
this
kick-off.
A
A
A
So,
for
example,
this
is
showing
me
all
of
the
issues
that
have
that
are
within
this
strategic
marketing
and
product
marketing
project
that
have
the
label
get
ops
and
I
might
want
to
say,
for
example,
show
me
all
of
the
ones
that
have
that
label
that
are
assigned
to
me
and
I
can
filter.
By
that
view,
I
might
furthermore,
want
to
say
show
me
all
of
them
that
are
in
the
current
milestone,
which
for
us
is
called
Bangalore,
so
I'm
using
this
as
a
way
to
filter
down
and
now
so
I
can
see.
A
These
are
the
these
are
the
three
issues
that
are
assigned
to
me
that
are
in
the
current
milestone
that
are
part
of
my
adopts
to
use
case.
So
this
is
this
is
like
the
stuff
I'm
working
on
right
now.
Now
it's
really
nice
about
this
is
this
URL
I
can
bookmark
that
or
I
can
copy
and
paste
that,
so
you
can
see
if
I
open
up
a
new
tab
and
I
go
to
that
URL.
A
It's
gonna
load
that
filtered
view
right
away.
So
this
is
this
is
a
very
powerful
tool.
This
is
bookmarkable.
You
can
set
a
bunch
of
filters
and
come
back
to
this,
so
this
is
kind
of
what
I
do
I
filter
in
this
way
am
I.
You
know
you
could
have
filter
for
a
different
assignee
there's
a
lot
of
different.
You
know
who
created
I
want
to
look
at
what
are
the
issues
I
created,
but
in
particular
I
use
labels
here,
a
lot
so
I
might
not
just
say
for
a
signee
I
might
say.
A
Potentially
I'll
do
another
label
and
we'll
say
this
label
is
anything
with
a
p1
or
let's
actually
do
this
one.
So
this
is
saying
show
me
everything
that
is
part
of
the
get-ups
use
case.
It
has
a
priority-one
label
which
right
now
is
probably
a
few
things,
but
you
could
filter
by
multiple
labels
by
signing,
etc.
This
is
a
powerful
way
to
do
that.
So
I
can
see
what
are
all
the
issues
that
are
tagged
with
strategic
marketing
or
labeled
with
strategic
marketing.
A
That's
how
labels
work.
The
other
concept
here
is
the
idea
of
a
scoped
label.
So
some
labels,
like
this
use
case
label
I,
can
apply
as
many
of
them
as
I
want.
Some
of
these
labels
are
what
we
call
scoped
label
and
they
have
two
colons
in
between
them
and
when
they
appear
they
have
this
pill
format
where
the
thing
in
front
of
the
colon
is
here
and
the
thing
behind
the
colons.
A
A
If
I
were
to
change
this
to
done,
it
gets
rid
of
the
work-in-progress,
it
can
only
have
one
of
those
you
can
only
have
you
know,
started
or
work
in
progress
or
not
started
or
work
in
progress
or
done.
It
can
only
have
one
of
those
or
it
only
be
one
of
priority.
One
priority
to
your
priority
3.
It
can
only
be
one
of
internal
or
external.
That's
how
these
scope
labels
work,
whereas
these
unscoped
labels,
you
know,
for
example,
the
get-ups
use
case.
I
could
have
maybe
something
as
part
of
multiple
use
cases.
A
I
might
have
some
some
broader
work
that
I'm
doing
it
applies
to
multiple
use
cases.
So
it's
an
unskilled
label.
This
is
a
PMS
as
a
pmm
tag
on
it
because
I'm
working
on
it,
but
it
could
also
have
technical
marketing.
It
could
also
have
alliances
if
we're
all
collaborating
together.
For
example,
here's
one
where
it
has
the
PMM
tag,
because
I'm
working
on
it
and
also
has
the
alliance's
tag,
is
my
uncas
also
working
on
this.
So
these
are
unscoped.
You
can
have
as
many
as
you
want.
These
are
scoped
you.
A
You
can
only
have
one
of
that
type
and,
let's
take
a
look,
then
that's
labels.
Let's
take
a
look
at
issue
boards,
so
here's
issues,
searches
and
let's
take
a
look
at
issue
boards.
So
here's
an
issue
board-
and
this
is
also
known
as
a
Kanban
board
if
you're
familiar
with
Kanban
board
this.
Some
people
do
this
by
writing
things
on
a
post-it
note
and
they
have
columns
and
they
might
have
to
do
doing
and
done
and
as
you
move
the
post-it
note
across
the
board,
that's
the
original
kind
of
Kanban
style.
A
That's
exactly
what
this
is
so
these
columns
here
they
could
be
to
do
doing
and
done.
I
don't
have
one
set
up
like
that
right
now,
but
that
you
could
have
that
concept
and
you
move
the
cards
across
the
columns.
The
other
way,
though,
is
like
by
priority.
So
this
is
showing
me
this
is
my
board,
and
this
has
a
certain
scope
where
this
is.
This
is
my
board.
We
can
even
call
it
like
William.
A
She
is
board
because
there's
a
lot
of
Williams
like
William
aureus
as
well,
and
it's
a
sign
to
me
so
this
is
this-
is
showing
all
the
issues
that
are
assigned
to
me.
That's
what
this
board
shows
and
then
the
columns
in
this
board
are
showing
various
priorities.
So,
for
example,
this
one
to
create
a
get
up
speaker
deck
is
priority
two,
but
I
really
want
that
to
be
priority
one.
A
So
if
I,
if
I
open
up
the
issue,
I
can
see
right
now,
it's
labeled
with
with
the
P
to
label,
but
if
I'm
on
my
board
here
and
I
drag
it
over
to
the
P
one
column,
it's
gonna
remove
this
label
and
it's
going
to
add
this
label
automatically
for
me.
So
if
I
look
at
my
issue
here-
and
I
refresh
the
page
I
can
see,
it's
now
changed
to
a
P
one,
and
even
my
log
here
shows
that
I
changed
the
labeling
here,
it'd
be
in
a
way.
A
I
did
that
one
way
to
do
it
would
be
to
go
to
here
to
add
the
labels
and
change
the
labels
here.
Another
way
to
do
it
would
be
with
a
smart
action
or
a
quick
action.
So
if
you
do
slash
label
and
then
tilde
and
then
here
I
want
P,
:
:,
let's
say
P
3.
So
if
I
had
a
comment
with
this
quick
action,
quick
actions
are
really
nice.
They're,
easy
to
add
milestones,
you
could
add
a
milestone.
You
can
change
the
milestone
you
could
assign
it
with
this.
A
A
So
when
I,
you
know
refresh
here,
I
can
see
we're
both
assign
with
that
quick
action
and
if
I
go
back
to
my
board,
I
I
can
see
if
I
refresh
my
board,
give
it
a
moment
to
load
here
now
that
speaker
deck
is
in
my
P
3
column.
So
the
column
represents
a
label
you,
so
you
can
set
up
your
boards
with
various
labels.
It
could
be
to
do
doing
and
done.
It
could
be
your
priorities.
That's
how
I
like
to
view
mine.
In
fact,
this
is
a
priority
one.
A
A
Sarah's
gonna,
be
asking
me
why.
Why
were
you
assigning
me
an
unexciting
me?
So
that's
columns
on
a
board
by
label.
You
could
also
have
a
board
that
is
a
column
by
assignee,
so
what
we
call
a
list
so,
for
example,
you
can
see
I
can
add
a
list
here
and
a
list
could
be
a
label,
a
list
could
be
an
assignee
or
a
list
could
be
a
milestone.
A
So
this
is
the
PMM
team
board
and
you
can
see,
there's
a
column
for
Tracy
and
there's
a
column
for
me
and
Cindy,
and
so
this
is
showing
you
know
at
a
teen
level.
I
can
see
what
is
all
the
work
that's
assigned
to
Tracy.
What's
all
the
work
that's
assigned
to
Cindy
our
saamiya,
and
so,
if
I
wanted
to
take
an
issue
here,
like
you
know,
review
this
updated
pricing,
page
and
I
wanted
to
assign
it
to
Tracy
if
I
dragged
it
over
here,
just
like
dragging
on
a
board
would
change
the
label
here.
A
It
would
unassigned
me
and
it
would
assign
Tracy
moving
cards
across
the
board,
takes
that
issue
in
it
and
it
changes
whatever
state.
That
is
the
last
way,
as
I
mentioned
was
milestones,
and
so,
for
example,
here's
an
example
of
a
milestone
board.
Where
here
it
has
a
few
milestones,
these
ones
are
set
up
by
quarter:
Q
2
Q,
3,
Q
4.
If
I
thought,
this
is
not
going
to
get
quite
done
in
q2,
I
want
to
move
it
to
q3,
or
this
is
we're
moving
this
one
out
to
q4.
A
This
one
is
based
on
milestones,
so
you
can
have
a
milestone
base
board.
You
can
have
an
assignee
base
board,
you
could
have
a
label
base
board
and
you
can
create
a
lot
of
different
boards.
You
know
so
you
might
have
different
boards
with
different
views
that
you
use
that's
the
kind
of
concept
of
an
issue
board
and
how
to
use
that
board.
As
you
move
the
cards
across,
it
might
show
various
progress,
like
you
know,
stage
1
and
stage
2
and
stage
3.
A
If
you
have
different
states
that
it
needs
to
move
through,
that
would
be
the
concept
of
a
board,
so
labels
are
very
powerful.
They
do
a
lot
of
things
in
gitlab.
Hopefully,
I
showed
you
a
couple
ways
to
use
those
I
like
to
use
this
few.
This
is
my
favorite
I,
like
this
better
than
the
boards
I
feel.
Like
I
have
a
more
granular
control,
but
you
can
do
this
on
a
board
as
well,
where,
if
you
have
a
board
open,
you
can
filter
down
to
certain.
A
You
know
by
reaction.
So
now
I
can
use
a
board
as
well.
I
can
do
the
same
thing.
I
could
set
to
an
assignee,
you
know
assigned
to
me
and
those
kind
of
things.
So
you
have
this
filtering
capability.
You
can
do
in
a
list
view
or
within
a
board
the
board
columns
represent
either
label
or
assignees
or
milestones
and
the
labels.
In
general,
we
talked
about
scoped
and
unscoped
labels,
so
hopefully,
together
with
some
of
the
other
videos.