Structure that holds
Open canvases stay useful for a session and turn into a mess by week two. A project in ALLO has a shape that survives. You come back three weeks later and the work is where you left it, in the order it made sense.
See it the way you need to
Some work wants a canvas. Some wants a board or a simple list. Switch between views without moving anything to a different tool.
Every project has the views your team actually needs.
Kanban for status
Drag cards between columns. See what's in progress, in review, and shipped at a glance. Cards show thumbnails of the canvas inside, not just a title.
List for spreadsheet-style filtering
Sort by owner, due date, priority, tag. Same data as Kanban, in a denser format for triage and weekly planning.
Calendar for launches
See launches, reviews, and handoffs on the dates they actually happen. Keep campaigns and project milestones visible without leaving the project room.
Timeline for deadlines
See the full quarter laid out. Spot conflicts before they happen. Drag bars to shift deadlines and downstream events update.
Dashboard for the project at a glance
Status, blockers, recent activity, links to canvases. The view your manager opens on Friday afternoons.
The card is the canvas.
Every project card opens into the full canvas where the brief, references, files, comments, and work-in-progress live. In many tools, a card is a row with comments and attachments while the actual work happens somewhere else. In ALLO, the card opens directly into the work.
Every card belongs to a goal, a deadline, and a team.
Cards in ALLO carry the context most other tools force you to remember. Each card knows which project it belongs to, which goal it serves, who owns it, when it's due, and which canvas holds the work.
Open the card and you see all of that without searching. Project name. Goal it ladders up to, with live progress. Owner. Due date. Tags. Thumbnail preview of the canvas inside.
Everything in one place
The files, the feedback, the references, the current state of the work. One project, one room. No hunting across four apps to reconstruct where things stand.