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Migration briefs

Google Sheets migration brief for engineering delivery teams

A practical Google Sheets migration brief for engineering delivery teams moving into Kanvly with boards, notes, owners, and context intact.

Updated

June 10, 2026

Read time

4 min read

Intent

Migration comparison

Key takeaways

  • Google Sheets is strongest for fast shared lists and familiar lightweight operations.
  • The migration should be judged against blocked work, release slippage, review queue age, bug triage quality, and handoff clarity, not only feature parity.
  • The main risk is that spreadsheets can hide ownership, decisions, and follow-up once workflows become collaborative.

Overview

A practical Google Sheets migration brief for engineering delivery teams moving into Kanvly with boards, notes, owners, and context intact. It helps the team decide what to keep, what to simplify, and what should not be copied into the new workspace.

Page-specific fit

Why this resource exists

Source tool: Google Sheets.

Tool category: spreadsheet-based tracking.

Team pressure: implementation work, bugs, incidents, design questions, release notes, and stakeholder expectations collide.

Migration risk: spreadsheets can hide ownership, decisions, and follow-up once workflows become collaborative.

When engineering delivery teams should consider migrating from Google Sheets

Google Sheets can be useful for fast shared lists and familiar lightweight operations, but engineering delivery teams often need a calmer operating layer when implementation work, bugs, incidents, design questions, release notes, and stakeholder expectations collide.

The migration question is not whether Kanvly can copy every field. The better question is whether the new workspace makes ownership, notes, dates, and decisions easier to trust.

What to keep

Keep the parts of the old system that still support decisions. That usually means current work, active owners, important dates, useful labels, recent decisions, and references people still trust.

Do not migrate stale fields just because they exist. A migration is an opportunity to simplify the operating model before it becomes expensive again.

  • Current active work with owners.
  • Critical dates and commitments.
  • High-value notes, decisions, and references.
  • Recurring workflow stages the team actually uses.

What to simplify

spreadsheets can hide ownership, decisions, and follow-up once workflows become collaborative. For engineering delivery teams, this can turn a migration into a copy of the old complexity.

Simplify before importing broadly. Use a pilot board, confirm the review cadence, and only add fields that help the team make better decisions.

Kanvly setup path

Start with one real workflow in Kanvly. Recreate the stages, add owners, connect the most important notes, and test whether the team can run a weekly review without returning to the old system.

The workspace should keep the delivery board simple while preserving acceptance notes, decisions, blockers, and launch communication. This is where Kanvly is most useful: the board gives movement, while notes and AI help preserve and reuse context.

Migration success criteria

Use blocked work, release slippage, review queue age, bug triage quality, and handoff clarity as the measurement loop. If those signals improve, the migration is helping the operating system rather than merely changing software.

The final decision should include daily users, not only admins. The people who update cards and notes every day will reveal whether the new workspace is actually simpler.

Implementation checklist
  • Choose one workflow for the migration pilot.
  • List fields, views, and notes that are still useful.
  • Remove stale states before importing.
  • Test weekly review in Kanvly with real work.
  • Decide whether to migrate, simplify, or keep tool boundaries clear.
FAQ

Quick answers to common questions

These answers stay close to what Kanvly actually does today.

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