Overview
A workflow playbook for marketing teams managing project intake work with boards, notes, owners, review cadence, and measurable follow-through. The page maps the operating problem, recommended structure, Kanvly setup, and measurement loop for this long-tail workflow.
The project intake problem for marketing teams
Nobody struggles with project intake work in the abstract; they struggle at the seams, where one person's "done" becomes another's "to do." That is exactly where marketing teams feel it, because campaign ideas, creative review, channel deadlines, approvals, and reporting notes often drift apart.
That is why the workflow needs more than a list of tasks. It needs a visible path for movement, a place for durable context, and a review habit that keeps stale work from becoming invisible.
Recommended workflow stages
A practical first version uses these stages: Submitted, Clarifying, Prioritizing, Approved, Scheduled, Declined. The exact names can change, but each stage should represent a decision or state that the team can recognize quickly.
Every rare edge case you promote to a stage makes the board harder to read for the common case. Park the exceptions in card notes; reserve columns for states that recur.
- Submitted: make the entry and exit rule explicit.
- Clarifying: make the entry and exit rule explicit.
- Prioritizing: make the entry and exit rule explicit.
- Approved: make the entry and exit rule explicit.
- Scheduled: make the entry and exit rule explicit.
- Declined: make the entry and exit rule explicit.
What context belongs beside the work
Intake items should preserve requester context, business reason, urgency, effort hints, approver notes, and the decision that sets expectations.
The workflow needs to keep briefs, SEO intent, review status, launch dates, and distribution tasks connected to one visible production system. When context is separated from work, the team may still have a board, but the board stops being a source of truth.
What this looks like in practice for marketing teams
Imagine roughly 14 live project intake workflow items moving through 6 stages for a marketing group. The trouble is rarely the count — it is that "Submitted" becomes a holding pen where half-defined work waits without an owner.
Give the workflow a 9-day loop and protect one habit above all: a 33-minute review of blocked, waiting, and aging "Submitted" cards. Combined with a clear definition of "Declined" — which matters because campaign ideas, creative review, channel deadlines, approvals, and reporting notes often drift apart — that cadence is what actually shifts draft age, review latency, approval blockers, publish consistency, and refresh completion, not a richer card template.
Kanvly setup pattern
Let the Kanvly board carry the motion between Submitted and Declined, and let linked notes and pages carry the reasoning — briefs, decisions, playbooks, handoff detail. The rule of thumb: a card you can read in seconds, backed by context you can rely on.
Marketing teams get a single operating surface this way, with none of the ceremony of a full tooling project. Prove it on one real workflow first; only the parts that genuinely recur are worth turning into templates.
Measure the workflow, not only the output
Point the measurement loop at draft age, review latency, approval blockers, publish consistency, and refresh completion — that is the indicator that tells marketing teams whether the workflow is actually paying off.
The workflow is healthier when the team spends less time asking for status, fewer tasks sit without owners, and decisions are easier to find after the work changes stage.
- Agree what Submitted and Declined mean before you add a single custom field.
- Give every active card an owner, next action, and due date where appropriate.
- Keep the reasoning beside the work, so a move never needs re-explaining.
- Review blocked and stale work during a predictable cadence.
- Capture learning before archiving completed work.