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OpenProject 16.3: UX/UI Improvements

OpenProject 16.3 is here, bringing a fresh look, more control over email notifications for meetings, along with other improvements that make everyday work more efficient. This release is all about helping you stay focused, find what you need faster, and keep your projects running smoothly.

We will summarize the most important changes in this blog article and, as always, please see our release notes that contain all changes, features and bug fixes.

Here is a quick navigation to all feature descriptions:

UX/UI improvements

Your workspace should help you focus — not distract you. That’s why in 16.3, we’ve refined the design and navigation to make OpenProject easier and more pleasant to use:

  • The header has been redesigned with Primer, including a fresh icon for notifications.
  • The grid icon now opens as a smooth lateral menu, giving you quick access to Home, My Page, and My time tracking.
  • The sign-in modal and running time tracking section have moved to a new overlay menu on the right, keeping the header clean and uncluttered.

These changes make it easier to find your way around and keep important tools within reach.

Screenshot showing the home page of OpenProject Community, with highlighted grid menu dropdown and redesigned icons on the right side of the header

Better control of meetings notifications

Receiving emails about every small update can be annoying. With OpenProject 16.3, you can now choose whether participants receive email calendar updates when creating or copying a meeting.

A simple checkbox in the meeting form lets you enable or mute notifications. The current status is always visible in the sidebar:

  • For one-time meetings, you can toggle notifications directly there.
  • For recurring meetings, you can set the preference in the template so it applies to the whole series.

This small change gives you more control over how and when participants are informed and keeps your communication timely and relevant.

Screenshot showing OpenProject meeting template with overlay to disable email notifications

Learn more about meeting management with OpenProject.

Timer display in the My time tracking module

We’ve made it easier to avoid double time entries and keep an eye on your work in progress. The My time tracking module now clearly shows if a timer is running: In both list view and calendar view, the work package currently being tracked is marked with a small timer icon and blue background. This makes it easy to spot ongoing tracking, especially if you step away and return later in the day.

Screenshot showing OpenProject’s My time tracking module in calendar view with a highlighted time entry on ‘today’ that is running for 5 minutes, displayed with a timer icon

Screenshot showing OpenProject’s My time tracking module in list view with a highlighted time entry on ‘today’ that is running for 5 minutes, displayed with a timer icon

Not familiar with the My time tracking module yet? Learn more about it in our blog.

More accurate progress reporting

Progress reporting in work package tables is now more reliable. In OpenProject 15.5, we introduced % Complete sums, but in some cases — especially when not all work packages had values for Work or Remaining work — the calculation could be misleading.

With 16.3, these % Complete sums are now calculated accurately across all progress calculation modes, including status-based and simple averages. This means you can trust the numbers you see, no matter how your team tracks progress.

Learn more about monitoring your OpenProject installation.

Better health check for the Nextcloud integration

For teams using the Nextcloud integration in the Corporate plan, there’s now a clearer way to spot one specific issue: missing token exchange capability. If your identity provider doesn’t support token exchange (often due to older OIDC settings), the health check will now flag this directly. That way, you’ll get a precise message pointing to the cause, instead of a generic “token refresh failed” error.

Faster cost reporting with autocomplete

Cost reports are a powerful way to get insight into your projects — and now, setting them up is faster. In OpenProject 16.3, key filters like User or Work package now support autocomplete in cost report filters. Just start typing and select from matching results, instead of scrolling through long lists. It’s a small change that can save you time every week.

Learn more about cost reporting with OpenProject.

OpenProject 16.3: Migration, installation, updates and support

Follow the upgrade guide for the packaged installation or Docker installation to update your OpenProject installation to OpenProject 16.3. We update your hosted OpenProject environments (Enterprise cloud) today, August 13, 2025.

You will find more information about all new features and changes in our Release notes or in the OpenProject Documentation.

If you need support, you can post your questions in the Community Forum, or if you are eligible for Enterprise support, please contact us and we are happy to support you personally.

Credits

A very special thank you goes to City of Cologne, Deutsche Bahn and ZenDiS for sponsoring released or upcoming features. Your support, alongside the efforts of our amazing Community, helps drive these innovations. Also a big thanks to our Community members for reporting bugs and helping us identify and provide fixes. Special thanks for reporting and finding bugs go to Sven Kunze, Michael Lathion, Gábor Alexovics, and Tom Gugel.

Last but not least, we are very grateful for our very engaged translation contributors on Crowdin, who translated quite a few OpenProject strings! This release we would like to particularly thank the following users:

  • Alin Marcu, for a great number of translations into Romanian.
  • William, for a great number of translations into Chinese Traditional.
  • OlhaTrotska, for a great number of translations into Ukrainian.

Would you like to help out with translations yourself? Then take a look at our translation guide and find out exactly how you can contribute. It is very much appreciated!

As always, we welcome any feedback on this release. 💙

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AI-powered project and portfolio management with OpenProject

AI is everywhere. Especially large language models (LLM), which are what most people mean when they talk about AI today. These models are becoming common tools at work and in everyday life. At the same time, concerns around data protection and transparency remain.

At OpenProject, we’ve been exploring this topic deeply. We recognize both the incredible potential and the valid concerns. This article gives you a first look at how OpenProject approaches AI — and what you can expect as a user.

How does OpenProject approach AI?

At OpenProject, we approach AI — or more precisely, language models — with both curiosity and caution. Our goal is clear: help users save time and reduce complexity, without compromising privacy or open source standards.

We stick to a simple principle: “A fool with a tool is still a fool.” This applies to software just as much as it does to artificial intelligence: What matters is how you use it. Or, in other words, technology only helps if it’s used responsibly. That’s why we develop AI-powered features to assist, not replace, human decision-making.

We will use language models to save our users time and hassle in their work. At the same time, we remain firmly committed to our principles: Open source standards will not be broken and data protection is our top priority.

One quick note: While we use the term “AI” in this article, we technically refer to large language models (LLMs). The distinction matters, but for clarity, we follow everyday language.

Important

Even though we will be implementing AI/LLM features in OpenProject, the final decision will always be up to you, the user. Therefore, we want to emphasize that we will offer the option to enable or disable AI features.

OpenProject follows strict ethical AI guidelines

Human decision authority

  • AI serves as decision support, never autonomous decision-making
  • Transparent recommendations with clear explanations
  • Human oversight required for all critical decisions
  • Clear accountability chains maintained

Privacy & GDPR compliance

  • Strict data isolation between projects and tenants
  • Minimal data collection
  • Automated data deletion routines
  • Complete audit trails and documentation

Sustainability & ethics

  • Energy-efficient model selection
  • Ethical training data sourcing
  • Regular bias testing and mitigation

Read more on our guidelines for the responsible use of AI at OpenProject (German only) on GitHub.

PMflex and PM² compliance

Our AI features are designed to align with PM² as well as with PMflex, the official German standard for strategic project and portfolio management in the public sector. This means workflows automatically follow government requirements — no manual checks needed.

Thanks to AI, OpenProject can detect risks early, before they disrupt timelines or budgets. Real-time analytics and predictive insights give public sector teams the confidence to make data-driven decisions.

At the same time, automating workflows and reporting can save up to 80% of the time normally spent on admin tasks — allowing teams to focus on strategy rather than routine.

Preview of some of the first AI features in OpenProject

Even though we cannot make any firm promises regarding the release date for AI features at this time, we would like to show you some features that we are working on intensively. Especially with the still relatively new topic of AI, we want to test all features extensively before we release them.

Note

Some technical information: To develop AI features, we use our own OpenProject Haystack. Just like the rest of OpenProject, all source code is publicly available. Visit our Haystack GitHub to see it and learn more about the system architecture.

During a hackathon in July, we designed several AI-powered features and showcased them in a demo. Here’s a short overview of the specific AI features that we now continue working on:

Automatically generated tips to improve your project management

Some users are new to project and portfolio management and might need support. Ideally, this takes place directly in the application so that users don’t have to look up information in their handbook. Additionally, no external handbook can give you the exact information you need based on the data you already created.

This is why we created a feature to automatically display tips, specifically based on PMflex and PM² standards. But also users who are not working with these standards will benefit from this feature as some hints and are generally helpful in the area of project and portfolio management.

Here’s an example of how we implemented this feature on a demo instance:

Screenshot of an OpenProject demo instance, showing an overview page with highlighted AI feature to display tips project management

These are the hints in the example screenshot:

  • Update portfolio plan
  • Complete documentation
  • Add missing deadlines
  • Monitor scope changes

The overview page only shows the five most relevant notes. The information includes not only missing tasks, but also notes on what has already been accomplished.

Automatically generated status reports

Creating a project status report can be very time-consuming and tedious, requiring a lot of copying and pasting. With the help of the OpenProject LLM, users save several hours of time and can focus on more important things.

The feature to generate status reports by just pressing a button is still in development, and some parts of it don’t even need AI functionality. The LLM mainly summarizes the information used in the project and creates a short text based on that.

After one minute, your project status report is created and you can adjust, save and share it with others. This is how a status report could look:

Screenshot of an OpenProject demo instance, showing a project status report (in German)

AI Document features: Ask AI, Improve writing and more

OpenProject is working on integrating familiar AI-powered writing tools directly into its editor — making it easy to translate, rephrase, check spelling, or generate first drafts without switching tools. Within the Documents module, on which we’re also currently working, the AI can also perform helpful tasks like summarizing longer texts. This streamlines your workflow and supports teams in creating high-quality content more efficiently.

Screenshot of an OpenProject demo instance, showing the AI generated status report with the option to ‘Ask AI’

Conclusion and outlook on AI features in OpenProject

“We are continuing to work on AI features with one goal in mind: more efficient, standard-compliant work with a single mouse click, even without prior knowledge of AI.” – Dominic Bräunlein, Feature lead for AI topics at OpenProject

With OpenProject, we are committed to building AI features that are not only helpful, but also ethical, secure, and transparent. We believe that language models can significantly support users in their daily work — especially in the public sector, where structured processes, compliance, and documentation are essential.

By combining AI with OpenProject’s proven project management features, we want to reduce manual effort, accelerate strategic alignment, and make professional project and portfolio management accessible to more people. Whether you’re new to project management or a seasoned expert — our goal is to support your work without replacing your judgment.

We will continue developing and testing AI features carefully, hand in hand with our Community, partners, and users. If you’re interested in trying out the first features, we’ll keep you informed through our blog and newsletter. The future of project management is intelligent, but above all: open and secure.

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A PM²-based software solution for the European public sector

What does a software solution look like that enables employees in the public sector to successfully prioritize, manage, implement, and report on strategic initiatives?

At OpenProject, we explored this question during a hackathon last week. In this article, we give you an overview of our results.

The requirements we defined are based on PM² the open source project management methodology provided by the European Commission.

If you already want to “spoil” the results, feel free to watch the following video (available in German only), which we presented at the end of the hackathon:

Article navigation:

Wanted: A software solution for the strategic implementation of digitalization initiatives

Transparency is one of our core values, so in this article we want to share an overview of the hackathon, the requirements, and of course our proposed solutions.

Requirements included:

  • Compatibility to PM² (tailoring)
  • Consistency across portfolio, program, and project levels
  • Cross-agency collaboration
  • Agility
  • Enjoyable user experience

Challenges for us:

  • Only one week to develop additional features, comprehensive demo material, documentation, and (video) presentation. All of this alongside our daily business, including the release of version 16.2.
  • Immersing ourselves in the working environment and various user stories from public administration, which operates very differently than we do internally. Here, our extensive experience with the public sector, especially in connection with openDesk, was a major advantage.

Overview of the required user stories:

Several user stories were provided, each with associated data like budget, status, target states, and more. Every user story included at least one fictional persona, from whose perspective the solution needed to be demonstrated.

  1. Prioritize portfolio elements
  2. Manage portfolio
  3. Report program status
  4. Report project status

In addition to the predefined user stories, we also showcased how the solution could be used on the go via the mobile app.

Delivered: Full commitment for ten new PM² features

Alongside 19 developers, many other OpenProject team members were fully engaged in the PM² hackathon. Despite — or perhaps because of — the short timeframe and complex requirements, the energy and team spirit were tangible across all days, even across our globally distributed remote workspaces.

For Rosanna Sibora, who had her very first week at OpenProject as Chief Product Officer during the hackathon, the team’s commitment, creativity, and passion made a strong impression:

“During the hackathon, I was impressed by how well the self-organized teams collaborated. It clearly showed me how well-aligned the OpenProject team is and how open and empowering the culture is. We proved that 2+2 is definitely more than 4 — and what can be achieved with great collaboration and empowerment.” – Rosanna Sibora, CPO, OpenProject GmbH

OpenProject implementation – behind the scenes:

  • Full energy and passion, not just from developers
  • 15,000+ lines of new code
  • Team formation for developing new features, building a demo instance, and designing product mockups for additional features
  • Daily hackathon stand-ups, retros, and pulse checks with the PM² experts and other stakeholders, 100% remote collaboration using other open source tools like Big Blue Button and Element
  • Daily operations continued in parallel: support and release of OpenProject 16.2

OpenProject implementation – on the product level:

While the current version of OpenProject already supports the majority of requirements, we identified several aspects we wanted to expand or develop from scratch during the hackathon week. Especially relevant across all user stories was the development of features for reporting and managing goals, risks, and budgets.

Here is an overview of our main development focuses during the hackathon:

Let’s take a closer look at what these features and requirement implementations looked like by the end of the hackathon week.

Important

Please note that this is a summary of key developments. Additional features were also planned, designed, and developed during the hackathon. As these features were created in a very short time, they are not yet fully tested or finalized.

Planning and managing portfolios and programs

To support PM², OpenProject needed to manage not just projects but also portfolios and programs. Modeling these was the first step during the hackathon. Portfolio, sub-portfolio, and program extend the existing project hierarchy with the ability to group projects and manage them collectively.

Screenshot: Favorite “Projects” dropdown showing a hierarchical list of portfolio, sub-portfolio, program, and projects

Enhancing portfolio and program dashboards

On the overview pages for portfolios, (sub-)programs, or even projects, managers want to see key information about goals, milestones, risks, and budgets at a glance. To enable this, we created widgets during the hackathon that visually aggregate this data: charts for budgets and risks, listings of components with their priority, status, and goal progress. These widgets were implemented as prototypes in a new dashboard using the OpenProject Design System.

Screenshot: Portfolio overview page showing, among other things, a goals widget with percentage progress (19%) in different colors and counts of goals by status (18 on track, 3 critical, etc.)

Portfolio management with proposal functionality

We created a dedicated module for portfolio management where managers can first create portfolio proposals and then submit them for review. These can be downloaded as PDFs or added to a meeting.

Screenshot: “Portfolio management” module with a savable and filterable list of proposals, including attributes like status, budget, and overall rating. Dropdown on “Submit for review” button offers options to download as PDF, add to meeting, or create approval document.

Linking and improved display of budget planning and overviews

OpenProject already supports extensive budgeting and cost tracking, but previously limited this to individual projects. During the hackathon, we added cross-project budgeting, distinctions between planned and booked costs, and modeling of sub-budgets. The overview page and project lists can now display total budgets and their components.

Screenshot: Saved project list with filters and columns showing budget overview: Planned budget, Assigned to sub-budgets, Spent budget, and Available budget.

Calculated project scoring

Portfolio managers want to calculate project scores automatically based on project attributes, allowing better evaluation, prioritization, and communication of decisions. This functionality was further developed during the hackathon and activated on the demo instance to display ranking values for project weighting.

It is now possible to apply formulas to freely configurable values that together generate a score. This increases transparency and comparability of evaluations.

This feature is still in development (thanks City of Cologne for their support here), so we’re showing a design draft here:

Mockup OpenProject: Calculated project score A with formula “Project factor A + 0.25 * Project factor B - Project factor C”

Risk management and overview

Since risk management is a core requirement for the public sector, we created a dedicated risk module. It includes a risk matrix that visualizes project, portfolio, or program risks with color-coded severity.

Modeling is based on probability (1–5) and impact (1–5). The system calculates a risk level from these values.

This also means: Risks now have their own data type and are a core part of OpenProject. Users are encouraged to document risks, monitor them regularly, and take countermeasures.

Screenshot: Newly created “Risks” module displaying risk work packages in a color-coded matrix (X-axis: Impact, Y-axis: Probability) and a tabular risk list

Create status report meetings

Status reports are a key element of PM². But they are not just documents — they are often discussed in meetings. That’s why we created a feature to automatically generate status report meetings.

Directly from the overview page, managers can create proposals for a status report meeting with the steering committee. They can select a baseline timeframe and add currently relevant information from the portfolio. The system generates an agenda based on selected changes for further editing.

Screenshot: Portfolio dashboard with modal for creating a status report meeting. Includes baseline timeframe (e.g., last month) and toggles for changes to portfolio, budget, or milestones.

Documents module with real-time editing

A few weeks ago, OpenProject successfully participated in Hack Days 2025 in Paris, organized by the French government’s digital directorate, DINUM (direction interministérielle du numérique). We’ve now extended those features to enable collaborative real-time editing for multiple users.

To support collaborative creation and sharing of typical documents, the OpenProject documents module was completely redesigned. It now allows for automatically updated content and real-time collaborative editing.

Mobile app enhancements for portfolio/program management

We have been working on a mobile app (iOS/Android) for OpenProject for some time. During the hackathon, we also developed new functionality to differentiate between portfolio, program, and project levels in the app.

Please note that developing a high-quality mobile app takes time, and we want to ensure the best experience before release. Of course, we will announce availability as soon as it’s ready for users.

AI foundations and support for documents and project/portfolio management

OpenProject was extended with two core services: Haystack to gather relevant information, and a custom LLM (Large Language Model). Both services operate within the same network as OpenProject and have no internet access. No data leaves the cluster for AI usage.

Detailed AI features developed during the hackathon include:

AI-generated status report drafts

  • Create drafts of status reports based on work packages and attributes visible to the respective user, using a local AI trained on PMflex

AI assistance in project and portfolio management

  • Display of PMflex-based best practices on the overview page, based on analysis of project data and work packages
  • A secure local AI assists with introducing best practices and provides timely management recommendations

Screenshot: Portfolio overview page with new modules: “Latest status report” and “PMflex suggestions”, e.g., “Update portfolio plan” or “Complete documentation”

AI support in documents

  • Writing tools in the OpenProject editor (translate, rephrase, spell check, generate drafts, etc.)
  • Familiar AI editing features directly inside the editor
  • The documents module uses the LLM to perform simple text tasks like summarizations

Screenshot: Documents module with highlighted text and the following options: Ask AI anything, Improve writing, Fix spelling, Translate…, Simplify.


PDF export of portfolio and program status

We believe in a single source of truth for project data. However, there many use cases where an export is extremely helpful, e.g. when information needs to be documented in external systems. So during the hackathon we built a status report engine that creates pixel-perfect PDF files from the data in the system.

  • Status information
  • Budget
  • Risks
  • Objectives
  • KPIs
  • Milestones
  • Custom attributes
  • […]

Kudos go to the German Federal Ministry of the Interior who sponsored the pdf export of work packages in 2023. The PDF export library we developed laid the foundation for this feature.

PDF export portfolio status report

As an outlook, we are working on more configuration options to adjust the export to the specific needs. Additionally, we plan to add further charts and illustrations.

Found? – What happens after the hackathon?

All released features will be available either in OpenProject itself or in openDesk, the secure office and collaboration suite designed specifically for the public sector.

The rollout would likely proceed as follows:

  • Distribution via ZenDiS as a module in openDesk:

    • Monthly releases
    • Security concepts
    • Maintenance
    • Support
    • Hosting
  • Demo environments provided through OpenProject’s SaaS infrastructure

Even though the work is progress this hackathon clearly demonstrated how OpenProject, as an open source solution, can meet the concrete requirements of public administration — quickly, competently, and collaboratively.

There is a visible shift toward data sovereignty, open standards, and independent software solutions — not only, but especially in the public sector.

Anyone looking for a future-proof, sovereign solution will find a strong and experienced partner in OpenProject. Learn more about OpenProject for public administration.

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Secure project management software with servers in the EU

The server location is a relevant criterion when looking for software: If you choose a software provider from the EU with servers in the EU, you can rely on EU data protection (GDPR). Especially with project management (PM) software, data protection and security is an extremely important issue, since sensitive data is stored. But which project management software meets this requirement?

Find out in the article why the German PM software OpenProject is a safe choice in terms of server location, data protection and customer service.

Overview: Project management software from Germany

Anyone researching PM cloud software will quickly come across well-known solutions such as Jira, Asana or Trello. However, most market leaders for PM software are not based in the European Union and regularly host their servers outside the European Union. And even if software is hosted in Europe, stored data could be made available to US authorities upon request. This is in conflict with the GDPR and would therefore contradict the use of any cloud services with US reference.

If you are specifically looking for PM software from Germany, you need to take a good look. The following PM software providers have both their headquarters and server locations in Germany: OpenProject, Stackfield, InLoox, Factro, awork.

All of the above solutions offer servers in the European Union. In addition, they all offer German-language support, documentation – and, of course, a German user interface.

The best open source PM software from Germany: OpenProject

OpenProject stands out from other German project management software providers mainly because of the following criteria:

Successful in Germany and worldwide

A wide range of German-speaking companies and organizations already rely on the Enterprise version of OpenProject, including, for example: City of Cologne, Autoliv, University of Zurich, Fraunhofer, Volksbank Bocholt, Brandenburg State Parliament, Siemens or Charité Berlin. Many more are managing their projects with the free of charge Community version.

Customers of OpenProject: Stadt Köln, Autoliv, Universität Zürich, Fraunhofer, Volksbank Bocholt, Landtag Brandenburg, Siemens, Charité Berlin

In addition to numerous companies and organizations from the DACH region, OpenProject has customers from all over the world and from a wide range of industries. For example, from the construction industry (with its own OpenProject BIM version), education and research, technology, public institutions, healthcare, automotive industry,engineering,NGOs and foundations, or banking and insurance.

European legal security: DSGVO compliant and open source

Of course, the cloud-hosted version of OpenProject is DSGVO compliant. All data - starting with marketing! - is treated with strict confidentiality. Our goal is to minimize data storage, that is, to capture and store only Data that is really necessary. No matter if you are browsing the OpenProject website or using the software. We do not set cookies that are not technically necessary, and we do not collect or process personal data for any purpose other than ensuring our services.

In short: For OpenProject, data protection is not just a legal regulation, but a matter of course.

CEO Niels Lindenthal: “Our goal is to bring OpenProject to perfection as a lighthouse project for data privacy and security in Europe.

As open source software, the source code of OpenProject is publicly available. This means that numerous people can quickly expose errors and possible security vulnerabilities. Because: Like any software, OpenProject can be affected by security vulnerabilities. These can usually be found and fixed much faster in OpenProject by the vigilant community than in project management software that is not open source.

Good to know: For EU customers it is required by the GDPR to sign a data processing agreement (sometimes called data processing addendum) before using the OpenProject Enterprise cloud edition. To save bureaucratic effort and time for both sides, OpenProject has automated this process.

In addition to data security, data sovereignty is a top priority at OpenProject. Together with other open source software providers, OpenProject is currently working on openDesk - the Sovereign Workplace, an open source alternative to Microsoft, Google and Co. OpenDesk is initiated and supported by the Federal Ministry of the Interior and Homeland of Germany.

Server locations in Europe

OpenProject can be operated on self-managed servers (”on-premises”) or used as software-as-a-service in the cloud. If you decide to use the cloud version of OpenProject, your data will be stored on secure servers within the EU. If you prefer a server location specifically in France, this is also possible without any problems - just contact us!

Important

Prior to March 2026 our services are hosted across both Netways (Germany) and Scaleway (France) data center environments. Starting with March 2026, Scaleway will become our sole data center provider for the EU shard.

OpenProject is transparent in its dealings with the subcontractors it uses. For cloud solutions provided in the EU, you can find a list of subcontractors here.

Continuous backups and easy restore mechanisms

Security always includes backups, which are continuously created for OpenProject’s cloud solutions. This means that data can be easily restored in the event of an emergency. Backups are stored on separate servers at OpenProject and encrypted as data-at-rest (with AES-256).

German-speaking support for international customers

Another important criterion when deciding on project management software is customer support. While many people in the DACH region speak English, most feel most confident in their native language, especially when it comes to technical vocabulary. OpenProject, as a German company based in Berlin, offers full German support.

Book training and consulting in German or English, or contact our English- or German-speaking customer support staff. Our digital user guide is also available in German as well as English. And also in Spanish and French - further languages are planned.

Rely on OpenProject for all-around secure data handling in your project management. Software from Germany, with European standards - for international customers.

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A PMflex-based software solution for Germany's Federal Ministry for Digital and State Modernization (BMDS): Hackathon insights and outlook

What does a software solution look like that enables employees in the German federal administration to successfully prioritize, manage, implement, and report on strategic initiatives?

At OpenProject, we had the chance to explore this very question during a hackathon last week, as we are on the shortlist for this software solution. In this article, we will present the exact requirements from the German Federal Ministry for Digital and Modernization of the State (BMDS) and the results we were able to deliver.

The requirements defined by the BMDS are based on PMflex, a comprehensive strategic management solution and integrated project management system developed at the federal level specifically for public administration. PMflex is based on the open source project management methodology PM² provided by the European Commission.

If you already want to “spoil” the results, feel free to watch the following video (available in German only), which we presented to the ministry at the end of the hackathon:

Article navigation:

Wanted: A software solution for the strategic implementation of federal digitalization initiatives

During the week of July 14–18, 2025, OpenProject not only released a new software version but also spontaneously participated in a kind of hackathon. The client was the Federal Ministry for Digital and Modernization of the State (BMDS). The ministry is looking for a software solution to implement strategies at the portfolio, program, and project levels.

We at OpenProject are honored to be shortlisted for this solution and used the hackathon to show that all requirements are either already met or will be met in the near future.

Transparency is one of our core values, so in this article we want to share an overview of the hackathon, the requirements, and of course our proposed solutions.

Requirements included:

  • PMflex compatibility (tailoring)
  • Consistency across portfolio, program, and project levels
  • Cross-agency collaboration
  • Agility
  • Enjoyable user experience

Challenges for us:

  • Only one week to develop additional features, comprehensive demo material, documentation, and (video) presentation. All of this alongside our daily business, including the release of version 16.2.
  • Immersing ourselves in the working environment and various user stories from public administration, which operates very differently than we do internally. Here, our extensive experience with the public sector, especially in connection with openDesk, was a major advantage.

Overview of the required user stories:

Several user stories were provided, each with associated data like budget, status, target states, and more. Every user story included at least one fictional persona, from whose perspective the solution needed to be demonstrated.

  1. Prioritize portfolio elements
  2. Manage portfolio
  3. Report program status
  4. Report project status

In addition to the predefined user stories, we also showcased how the solution could be used on the go via the mobile app.

Delivered: Full commitment for ten new features and implementation in PMflexONE

Alongside 19 developers, many other OpenProject team members were fully engaged in the BMDS hackathon. Despite — or perhaps because of — the short timeframe and complex requirements, the energy and team spirit were tangible across all days, even across our globally distributed remote workspaces.

For Rosanna Sibora, who had her very first week at OpenProject as Chief Product Officer during the hackathon, the team’s commitment, creativity, and passion made a strong impression:

“During the hackathon, I was impressed by how well the self-organized teams collaborated. It clearly showed me how well-aligned the OpenProject team is and how open and empowering the culture is. We proved that 2+2 is definitely more than 4 — and what can be achieved with great collaboration and empowerment.” – Rosanna Sibora, CPO, OpenProject GmbH

OpenProject implementation – behind the scenes:

  • Full energy and passion, not just from developers
  • 15,000+ lines of new code
  • Team formation for developing new features, building a demo instance, and designing product mockups for additional features
  • Daily hackathon stand-ups, retros, and pulse checks with the BMDS and other stakeholders, 100% remote collaboration using other open source tools like Big Blue Button and Element
  • Daily operations continued in parallel: support and release of OpenProject 16.2

OpenProject implementation – on the product level:

While the current version of OpenProject already supports the majority of requirements, we identified several aspects we wanted to expand or develop from scratch during the hackathon week. Especially relevant across all user stories was the development of features for reporting and managing goals, risks, and budgets.

Here is an overview of our main development focuses during the hackathon:

Let’s take a closer look at what these features and requirement implementations looked like by the end of the hackathon week.

Important

Please note that this is a summary of key developments. Additional features were also planned, designed, and developed during the hackathon. As these features were created in a very short time, they are not yet fully tested or finalized.

Planning and managing portfolios and programs

To support PMflex, OpenProject needed to manage not just projects but also portfolios and programs. Modeling these was the first step during the hackathon. Portfolio, sub-portfolio, and program extend the existing project hierarchy with the ability to group projects and manage them collectively.

Screenshot PMflex.one: Favorited “Projects” dropdown showing a hierarchical list of portfolio, sub-portfolio, program, and projects

Enhancing portfolio and program dashboards

On the overview pages for portfolios, (sub-)programs, or even projects, managers want to see key information about goals, milestones, risks, and budgets at a glance. To enable this, we created widgets during the hackathon that visually aggregate this data: charts for budgets and risks, listings of components with their priority, status, and goal progress. These widgets were implemented as prototypes in a new dashboard using the OpenProject Design System.

Screenshot PMflex.one: Portfolio overview page showing, among other things, a goals widget with percentage progress (19%) in different colors and counts of goals by status (18 on track, 3 critical, etc.)

Portfolio management with proposal functionality

We created a dedicated module for portfolio management where managers can first create portfolio proposals and then submit them for review. These can be downloaded as PDFs or added to a meeting.

Screenshot PMflex.one: “Portfolio management” module with a savable and filterable list of proposals, including attributes like status, budget, and overall rating. Dropdown on “Submit for review” button offers options to download as PDF, add to meeting, or create approval document.

Linking and improved display of budget planning and overviews

OpenProject already supports extensive budgeting and cost tracking, but previously limited this to individual projects. During the hackathon, we added cross-project budgeting, distinctions between planned and booked costs, and modeling of sub-budgets. The overview page and project lists can now display total budgets and their components.

Screenshot PMflex.one: Saved project list with filters and columns showing budget overview: Planned budget, Assigned to sub-budgets, Spent budget, and Available budget.

Calculated project scoring

Portfolio managers want to calculate project scores automatically based on project attributes, allowing better evaluation, prioritization, and communication of decisions. This functionality was further developed during the hackathon and activated on the demo instance to display ranking values for project weighting.

It is now possible to apply formulas to freely configurable values that together generate a score. This increases transparency and comparability of evaluations.

This feature is still in development (thanks City of Cologne for their support here), so we’re showing a design draft here:

Mockup OpenProject: Calculated project score A with formula “Project factor A + 0.25 * Project factor B - Project factor C”

Risk management and overview

Since risk management is a core requirement for the BMDS, we created a dedicated risk module. It includes a risk matrix that visualizes project, portfolio, or program risks with color-coded severity.

Modeling is based on probability (1–5) and impact (1–5). The system calculates a risk level from these values.

This also means: Risks now have their own data type and are a core part of OpenProject. Users are encouraged to document risks, monitor them regularly, and take countermeasures.

Screenshot PMflex.one: Newly created “Risks” module displaying risk work packages in a color-coded matrix (X-axis: Impact, Y-axis: Probability) and a tabular risk list

Create status report meetings

Status reports are a key element of PMflex. But they are not just documents — they are often discussed in meetings. That’s why we created a feature to automatically generate status report meetings.

Directly from the overview page, managers can create proposals for a status report meeting with the steering committee. They can select a baseline timeframe and add currently relevant information from the portfolio. The system generates an agenda based on selected changes for further editing.

Screenshot PMflex.one: Portfolio dashboard with modal for creating a status report meeting. Includes baseline timeframe (e.g., last month) and toggles for changes to portfolio, budget, or milestones.

Documents module with real-time editing

A few weeks ago, OpenProject successfully participated in Hack Days 2025 in Paris, organized by the French government’s digital directorate, DINUM (direction interministérielle du numérique). We’ve now extended those features to enable collaborative real-time editing for multiple users.

To support collaborative creation and sharing of typical PMflex documents, the OpenProject documents module was completely redesigned. It now allows for automatically updated content and real-time collaborative editing.

Mobile app enhancements for portfolio/program management

We have been working on a mobile app (iOS/Android) for OpenProject for some time. During the hackathon, we also developed new functionality to differentiate between portfolio, program, and project levels in the app.

Please note that developing a high-quality mobile app takes time, and we want to ensure the best experience before release. Of course, we will announce availability as soon as it’s ready for users.

AI foundations and support for documents and project/portfolio management

OpenProject was extended with two core services: Haystack to gather relevant information, and a custom LLM (Large Language Model). Both services operate within the same network as OpenProject and have no internet access. No data leaves the cluster for AI usage.

Detailed AI features developed during the hackathon include:

AI-generated status report drafts

  • Create drafts of status reports based on work packages and attributes visible to the respective user, using a local AI trained on PMflex

AI assistance in project and portfolio management

  • Display of PMflex-based best practices on the overview page, based on analysis of project data and work packages
  • A secure local AI assists with introducing best practices and provides timely management recommendations

Screenshot PMflex.one: Portfolio overview page with new modules: “Latest status report” and “PMflex suggestions”, e.g., “Update portfolio plan” or “Complete documentation”

AI support in documents

  • Writing tools in the OpenProject editor (translate, rephrase, spell check, generate drafts, etc.)
  • Familiar AI editing features directly inside the editor
  • The documents module uses the LLM to perform simple text tasks like summarizations

Screenshot PMflex.one: Documents module with highlighted text and the following options: Ask AI anything, Improve writing, Fix spelling, Translate…, Simplify.


PDF export of portfolio and program status

We believe in a single source of truth for project data. However, there many use cases where an export is extremely helpful, e.g. when information needs to be documented in external systems. So during the hackathon we built a status report engine that creates pixel-perfext PDF files from the data in the system.

  • Status information
  • Budget
  • Risks
  • Objectives
  • KPIs
  • Milestones
  • Custom attributes
  • […]

Kudos go to the German Federal Ministry of the Interior who sponsored the pdf export of work packages in 2023. The PDF export library we developed laid the foundation for this feature.

PDF export of PMflex portfolio status report

As an outlook, we are working on more configuration options to adjust the export to the specific needs. Additionally, we plan to add further charts and illustrations.

Found? – What happens after the hackathon?

At the time of writing, it is still open what the next steps will be for OpenProject and the BMDS. What we do know is that the entire OpenProject team has grown through this experience — and we are proud of what was achieved and delivered during the week.

Regardless of the outcome of the tender, we will finalize, thoroughly test, and potentially release the developed features to our customers in future versions.

All released features will be available either in OpenProject itself or in openDesk, the secure office and collaboration suite designed specifically for the public sector.

If OpenProject is selected in the BMDS tender, the rollout would likely proceed as follows:

  • Distribution via ZenDiS as a module in openDesk:
    • Monthly releases
    • Security concepts
    • Maintenance
    • Support
    • Hosting
  • Distribution via ITZBund / Cloudogu
  • Implementation consulting via specialized partners such as ]init[
  • Demo environments provided through OpenProject’s SaaS infrastructure

Even though the BMDS decision is still pending, this hackathon clearly demonstrated how OpenProject, as an open source solution, can meet the concrete requirements of public administration — quickly, competently, and collaboratively.

There is a visible shift toward data sovereignty, open standards, and independent software solutions — not only, but especially in the public sector.

Anyone looking for a future-proof, sovereign solution will find a strong and experienced partner in OpenProject. Learn more about OpenProject for public administration.

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Empowering the Public Sector with OpenProject: An Open Source alternative for project management

At a time when digital sovereignty and transparency are essential for governmental institutions, OpenProject offers secure, open source project management and team collaboration software tailored to public sector needs.

Whether it’s resource-heavy infrastructure projects or multi-stakeholder policy implementations, public administrations across Europe are already leveraging its flexible features, such as work packages, Gantt charts, agile boards, time & cost tracking, wikis, and meeting management. This helps them to professionalize workflows while maintaining full control over their data.

OpenProject in Public Sector implementations

Many different public institutions already rely on OpenProject to manage their projects and organize their teams. They have implemented a wide range of use cases. We spoke personally with some of our customers and would like to give a short overview of how they use OpenProject to achieve their goals.

The Federal IT Cooperation (FITKO)

Within the openDesk framework, FITKO uses OpenProject for centralized coordination of IT standardization and to prepare and conduct the IT Planning Board Meetings. Key benefits include meeting management, documentation workflows, Nextcloud integration to link work packages and documents, and secure multi-stakeholder collaboration.

Read the case study: FITKO and OpenProject

District Office Enzkreis

At the District Office Enzkreis OpenProject supports major projects like implementing the Bundesteilhabegesetz and internal change initiatives. What are its strengths for this organization? Visualization in Gantt charts, real-time information exchange, efficient meeting agendas and minutes, and @-mentions for easy communication.

Read the case study: District Office Enzkreis and OpenProject

City of Constance

Through features like Gantt charts, Kanban boards, and integrated resource planning, Constance transformed its construction management and facility maintenance into collaborative, transparent, and accountable processes and manages their public order office seamlessly in one platform.

Read the case study: City of Constance and OpenProject

City of Chemnitz

As a hub for hundreds of public and culture-related projects, Chemnitz works with OpenProject to manage multiple projects with standardized templates, which accelerated project planning by 80%. It benefits from its self-hosted on-premises version to maintain their data sovereignty.

Read the interview: City of Chemnitz and OpenProject

City of Cologne

City of Cologne is managing a huge project portfolio in OpenProject and is actively contributing as a sponsor for project portfolio management, the Nextcloud integration, and scheduling and progress reporting features.

Brandenburg State Parliament

OpenProject plays a central role in advancing digital governance and transparency for the State Parliament of Brandenburg. With its flexible agile boards, meeting management, and workflows, the parliament coordinates initiatives, legislative processes, and digital strategy implementation. Teams streamline planning, track tasks, and collaborate smoothly across departments, all while maintaining full data sovereignty by self-hosting.

Logos from public sector clients that use OpenProject

Explore how OpenProject supports the public sector and helps customers succeed.

From strategy to execution: How PMFlex guides public sector success

OpenProject doesn’t just handle individual projects. It aligns perfectly with structured public sector methodologies like PMFlex. PMFlex is a – flexible – adaptation of the European PM² standard for project management. As a comprehensive strategy management solution, it links strategic goals with specific key performance indicators and enables end-to-end control at the portfolio, program, and project levels.

Using PMFlex as a framework, organizations clearly define roles, like Project Core Teams and Steering Committees. Along with phases and phase gates, while still being able to work agile inside the execution phase.

Example with PMFlex: On portfolio, program, and project levels

Public institutions often manage complex initiatives on multiple levels. With OpenProject, these align with PMFlex structures:

PMFlex Level In OpenProject How it helps
Portfolio Portfolio overviews (project lists, dashboards, reports) Aligns initiatives with political goals and digital agendas.
Program Aggregated views via parent projects with subprojects, global user visibility Ensures synergy across interrelated projects and shared resources.
Project Phases, gates, agile boards, work packages, wikis and more Keeps teams on track, transparent, and audit-ready.

In addition to the features mentioned above, OpenProject’s Meetings module offers the possibility to discuss tasks, risks, and strategies easily and in an audit-proof manner within the system at all levels. And, of course, the highly specific roles and permissions system in OpenProject allows all stakeholders to do exactly what their role requires – no more, no less.

In this way, public organizations can easily track progress on PMFlex indicators, prepare for formal gate reviews, and document results for stakeholders and audit institutions – all in one secure, open source environment.

Top features for the Public Administration

Feature Benefit
Work packages Clear task assignment, status tracking, visibility
Gantt charts Long-term planning, dependency management
Agile boards Hybrid workflows, flexible prioritization
Time & cost tracking Budget oversight, resource balancing
Meetings module Streamlined agendas, documented decisions
Wikis Knowledge base, shared documentation
Nextcloud integration All important documents linked to work packages

These features, powered by OpenProject, significantly reduce administrative overhead, foster team collaboration and informed decision-making, and help organizations remain GDPR compliant.

Data sovereignty is more than a buzzword

At OpenProject, data sovereignty is a core principle and not just a buzzword. Public sector organizations can choose between secure cloud hosting in a certified European data center or full control through self-managed on-premises installations. Both options ensure complete ownership and control of sensitive data, in full compliance with European regulations.

OpenProject is fully open source, licensed under GNU GPL v3. Its source code is publicly available on GitHub and openCoDE, providing full transparency and auditability. This openness not only strengthens trust, it enhances security by enabling early detection and resolution of potential vulnerabilities.

Free from vendor lock-in, organizations are empowered to adapt and extend the software as needed. For those seeking additional features and expert support, OpenProject GmbH offers affordable Enterprise packages that are still significantly more cost-effective than proprietary solutions like Microsoft Project or Atlassian Jira.

Ready for digital transformation?

OpenProject empowers public organizations to break free from siloed communication, manual tracking and workflows, and costly vendor lock-ins. By combining open standards with robust collaboration tools, it enables secure, transparent, and efficient governance.

Curious how OpenProject can support your administration? Get in touch with us and we are happy to share more insights into our different use cases.

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OpenProject 16.2: New header and sidebar with improved navigation and design

OpenProject 16.2 has been released and this version introduces new features and improvements again. We look forward to hearing your thoughts and feedback on the latest updates. Please take a few minutes to learn what changes for you. We will summarize the most important changes in this blog article and, as always, please see our release notes that contain all changes, features and bug fixes.

In this blog article, we will focus on the design updates and briefly summarize some more important features. Here is a quick navigation to all feature descriptions:

New header and sidebar with improved navigation and design

The most striking change from 16.1 to 16.2 is the more modern design and improved user experience of the sidebar and header navigation. The reason for these changes is to give the application a more contemporary look and to ensure compatibility with the openDesk application. It is important to us to provide the best possible user experience in openDesk when navigating between the different applications within openDesk.

The updates in OpenProject itself also follow familiar logic. For example, the project navigation has moved consistently into the sidebar. Here’s an overview of what’s new in OpenProject 16.2, regarding header and sidebar navigation:

  • The hamburger sidebar toggle has moved from the header to the sidebar.
  • The default sidebar color in light mode is now brighter.
  • The search and create buttons have a new, more intuitive position in the header.

Please note that these changes will not affect your already customized designs.

See a comparison between OpenProject version 16.1 (top) and 16.2 (highlighted below):

Home Page in OpenProject in comparison: Version 16.1 and Version 16.2 with updated header and sidebar

What do you think of these updates? As with any change, it may take some time to get used to the new navigation, but we hope that it will provide you with a better user experience in the long run and a more intuitive start for new users.

Other design updates in OpenProject 16.2

The changes to the header and sidebar weren’t the only design changes: as part of the ongoing updates to the Primer design system, the user interface and process for creating a new project or copying an existing one has also been improved. For example, when you create a project based on a template, you can now immediately select which modules and parts you want to copy and which you want to skip.

Also, in the Relations tab of a work package, the + Relation dropdown now uses second-level navigation: Only the first relations are shown directly, others are displayed when clicking on “Other relations”.

Seamless integration of open source applications with a SCIM API (Enterprise add-on)

While this is a rather technical update, the newly added SCIM API can be a huge benefit for seamless integration with other open source applications. It allows your identity provider (IdP) to automatically provision and de-provision users in OpenProject, based on the open SCIM standard.

This reduces manual work for administrators, ensures your user data stays in sync across systems, and improves overall security.

The SCIM API is available as an Enterprise add-on in the Corporate plan. Administrators can configure SCIM clients directly in OpenProject, generate secure system tokens, and see which users are managed by which client – all within the authentication settings.

Screenshot of the OpenProject administration to add a new SCIM client

This is particularly valuable for organizations looking to connect OpenProject to other open source tools such as Nextcloud or Keycloak, supporting a fully sovereign and integrated digital workspace.

See our system admin guide to learn more about authentication methods for OpenProject.

Non-Latin languages and emojis supported in PDF exports

We’re especially happy about this update, because it makes OpenProject even more international and inclusive: PDF exports of work packages now fully support non-Latin scripts and emojis, so languages like Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean and many others appear exactly as intended. This means your multilingual project data and even your favorite emojis are displayed correctly in your exported documents.

PDF export extract from an OpenProject work package that contains emojis, symbols and non-Latin characters

Option to disable keyboard shortcuts for better accessibility

Here comes another step in improving accessibility across OpenProject. Users can now disable all keyboard shortcuts in their personal settings. That’s not only helpful for people working with screen readers or other assistive technologies, but also for anyone who prefers to avoid unintended shortcut actions.

OpenProject account settings on interface options, with highlighted option to disable keyboard shortcuts

Tip

Have you noticed? We recently also updated the font on our website to make it easier to read. While improving the OpenProject application is our main focus, we are also aware of accessibility issues on our website and in our documentation, and we are working to address them.

Smoother experience with Custom fields, Meetings, and My time tracking

Apart from the already mentioned feature updates, OpenProject 16.2 includes many small improvements that make everyday work just a bit smoother.

When creating custom fields or project attributes, you can now pick the field type right at the start — saving clicks and making the setup process clearer.

For meetings, OpenProject is now listed as the organizer in calendar invitations instead of the person who created the meeting. This means everyone can freely accept or decline without accidentally canceling the event for all participants.

And in the My time tracking module, weekly views now collapse future days, helping you stay focused on what matters today.

OpenProject 16.2: Migration, installation, updates and support

Follow the upgrade guide for the packaged installation or Docker installation to update your OpenProject installation to OpenProject 16.2. We update your hosted OpenProject environments (Enterprise cloud) today, July 16, 2025.

You will find more information about all new features and changes in our Release notes or in the OpenProject Documentation.

If you need support, you can post your questions in the Community Forum, or if you are eligible for Enterprise support, please contact us and we are happy to support you personally.

Credits

A very special thank you goes to City of Cologne, Deutsche Bahn and ZenDiS for sponsoring released or upcoming features. Your support, alongside the efforts of our amazing Community, helps drive these innovations. Also a big thanks to our Community members for reporting bugs and helping us identify and provide fixes. Special thanks for reporting and finding bugs go to Michael Lathion, Jason Culligan, Sven Kunze, and Gábor Alexovics.

Last but not least, we are very grateful for our very engaged translation contributors on Crowdin, who translated quite a few OpenProject strings! This release we would like to particularly thank the following users:

  • William, for a great number of translations into Chinese Traditional.
  • rmiyata, for a great number of translations into Japanese.
  • rubenpedrolopez, for a great number of translations into Spanish.

Would you like to help out with translations yourself? Then take a look at our translation guide and find out exactly how you can contribute. It is very much appreciated!

As always, we welcome any feedback on this release. 💙

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Document and print meetings: Tasks, outcomes and minutes — all in one software

Every project involves regular meetings: What’s the current status? Who’s responsible for which tasks? Especially in public institutions, it’s crucial to document decisions from meetings clearly and in a way that’s audit-proof. Fully transparent, both internally and externally.

With OpenProject, this is effortless: You can prepare meetings in just a few clicks, link tasks, and create a structured record with responsibilities, outcomes, and a list of participants.

Meeting over? Export and print your meeting directly from the system, formatted as a clear PDF. This way, you have all decisions and responsibilities in black and white — ready for files, audits, or inquiries from citizens.

Document decisions

What’s the core of almost any meeting? Bringing together different perspectives and making decisions. In reality, this often looks quite different. Meetings run over time, participants aren’t sure why they’re there, and in the end, everyone is just as confused as when they started.

Your team needs meetings that are transparent and straightforward from start to finish. The right software guides you through every step and provides clear structure. Learn more about all the features in OpenProject’s meeting module: Recurring or one-time meetings, linking work packages, calendar integration, and much more.

OpenProject meeting in status closed, with agenda items and outcomes

How can I record decisions directly during a meeting?

With OpenProject, you record decisions right as the meeting happens. Nothing gets lost, and all participants – and those who couldn’t join – immediately see what was agreed.

To do this, set the meeting status to “In Progress.” This automatically activates a + Outcome button under each agenda item. Any participant can click it to log decisions on the spot.

You can also rearrange agenda items by drag & drop at any time. If certain points turn out to be irrelevant, simply

  • move them to the backlog at the end,
  • delete them,
  • or in a recurring meeting series, push them to the next meeting.

The result is a clear, traceable record that captures your decisions exactly as they were made.

Assign responsibilities

For decisions to be implemented, responsibilities must be crystal clear. In OpenProject, you define right in the meeting who is responsible for which agenda item.

This also avoids those awkward moments when no one starts the conversation because no one feels responsible — instead, everyone can see the name and avatar of the person in charge next to each agenda point.

Detailed view of two agenda items in an OpenProject Meeting, showing a duration and an assignee with name and avatar

This cuts down on questions and duplicated coordination. Projects run more smoothly because everyone knows their area of responsibility and the next steps are clear.

How do I assign responsibilities directly in a meeting?

OpenProject’s meeting module offers two ways to add agenda items and define responsibilities:

  1. You can add an existing work package (like a task or ticket), which typically already has an assigned person.

  2. You can create a new agenda item and note the responsible person directly in the text. Of course, you can also link multiple work packages within one item.

In both cases, you can add a responsible person in the top right of the agenda point. You decide whether this person is only presenting the topic or also in charge of following up afterward.

Detailed view of an OpenProject meeting with dropdown menu for an agenda item

Everything in the minutes — your single source of truth

All items from the meeting automatically come together in a structured record. This is your single, reliable source of truth — without scattered Excel sheets or Word files. With OpenProject, you keep working on tasks and documenting them exactly when they’re discussed. No more memory-based notes that are incomplete or vague.

What does the meeting record include automatically?

Your OpenProject meeting brings it all together: agenda, outcomes, tasks, documents, responsibilities, participants, plus date and time. Everything in one place, available to everyone involved.

You keep your familiar processes while gaining efficiency: build the minutes directly from your agenda and simply add outcomes. This saves time and creates a true reflection of your meeting.

Why is a central record so important?

With a single, always up-to-date document, you establish a clear single source of truth. No more outdated versions buried in emails or spreadsheets.

Even those who couldn’t attend the meeting can easily see what was discussed and decided. Often, one click on the linked work package is enough to view all details and the entire communication thread.

What other tools do I need for my meetings?

OpenProject covers almost everything — from the agenda to tasks to the final minutes. The only additional tool you need is software for the actual video or phone conference if you’re meeting online or in a hybrid setting. Ideally, you’ll use one where you can share your screen and display the meeting in OpenProject at the same time.

Tip

We’re passionate about open source — that’s why our own team uses the open source virtual classroom software BigBlueButton for video meetings. It pairs perfectly with OpenProject.

How does the calendar feature help?

The automatically generated invitation email contains an ICS file. This lets participants add the meeting to their personal calendar with a single click — whether they use Outlook, Thunderbird, or any other tool with iCal support.

Alternatively, you can download the appointment directly from within the meeting to add it to your calendar manually. Even though OpenProject includes its own calendar, we know that for many teams, the main calendar is where everything comes together. That’s why we make integration easy.

Black on white — export and print your minutes

When the meeting is done, you can export and print your minutes right away. This way, all decisions and responsibilities are clearly documented — black on white, audit-proof, and ready for your files.

PDF view of an OpenProject meeting - with cover sheet and all selected information

How do I print my meeting minutes?

Just a few clicks export the minutes as a PDF. You can choose whether to include

  • a list of participants (above the agenda),
  • a list of attachments (at the end),
  • backlog entries,
  • or outcomes.

You can also add a custom footer text. Click Download, and you’ll get a professionally formatted document, ready to print or archive digitally.

Why does this matter for records and audits?

A printed, audit-ready protocol is essential, especially in public institutions and organizations with strict requirements for written documentation. It lets you prove at any time who decided what and when.

Even though people are ready for digital processes, the requirements behind the scenes often still demand paper. And with OpenProject, you can provide it seamlessly.

Conclusion: Why OpenProject is especially valuable for meetings in public projects

With OpenProject, you permanently document decisions, tasks, and responsibilities — transparent, audit-ready, and accessible to everyone. This doesn’t just help you meet documentation requirements, but also makes your projects more organized and your teams collaborate more effectively.

In public institutions, it’s particularly important to document processes completely and be able to prove at any time who decided what. OpenProject makes this possible without media breaks, without scattered Excel sheets or Word files. Instead, you have one central platform that seamlessly connects planning, execution, and follow-up for your meetings.

This keeps your projects transparent and verifiable at all times. You can be confident that everyone is on the same page — from the first decision to the printed record that clearly documents every outcome.

Learn more about OpenProject for the public sector, including several case studies.

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Strong open source Jira and Confluence alternative: OpenProject and XWiki join forces

We are delighted to announce our official partnership with XWiki. This adds another important milestone on our journey to establish a fully open, transparent, and data-sovereign ecosystem as a genuine open source alternative to proprietary tools such as Atlassian Confluence and Jira.

A shared vision for digital sovereignty

Both OpenProject and XWiki have always stood for open standards, transparency, and user control. At a time when data sovereignty and digital independence are becoming increasingly important, a strategic collaboration was the next logical step.

Our goal: Together, we want to offer organizations an integrated, open source alternative to Jira and Confluence, combining a solution for project management and knowledge management – and thus a powerful, privacy-friendly as well as cost-effective alternative to Atlassian tools.

“This partnership strengthens the open source ecosystem and marks an important step for organizations to move away from Atlassian — toward digital sovereignty and independence. We are delighted to have XWiki as an experienced and committed partner at our side that share the same vision and values to further advance open and sovereign software solutions.” – Niels Lindenthal, CEO, OpenProject GmbH

Screenshot of Niels Lindenthal from OpenProject and Ludovic Dubost from XWiki and CryptPad) Image: Niels Lindenthal (CEO OpenProject) and Ludovic Dubost (CEO XWiki and CryptPad) at the OSXP in Paris.

“Our partnership with OpenProject is a natural extension of a shared commitment to building open, sovereign digital infrastructure for Europe and beyond. At the same time, it’s a strong affirmation of our joint vision: delivering integrated, open source solutions that respect user freedom and data sovereignty. By combining our expertise, we’re creating a compelling alternative to Atlassian’s Jira and Confluence — one that puts control and transparency back into the hands of the user. It’s a step forward for open-source collaboration in Europe, and most importantly, it responds directly to what our customers have been asking for.” — Ludovic Dubost, CEO and Founder, XWiki SAS and CryptPad

OpenProject + XWiki = Open source stack for modern teams

XWiki is a powerful platform for collaborative knowledge management – ideal as a Confluence replacement. OpenProject offers comprehensive project planning, task management, and issue tracking – a strong alternative to Jira.

The combination of both solutions creates an open, modular stack that enables teams to collaborate efficiently without compromising on control, security, or usability.

Screenshot benefits of open source alternative jira and confluence atlassian) Image: Overview of benefits of the open source alternative for Jira (OpenProject) and Confluence (XWiki)

Concrete benefits for our users for switching from Jira and Confluence

This partnership is not just a symbolic alliance – it also brings practical benefits:

  • Integration in development: We are actively working on an integration between OpenProject and XWiki to enable a seamless user experience.
  • Joined sales & support: Both partners will be able to offer each other’s services and support packages.
  • Expanded ecosystem: The connection to other open source providers such as Nextcloud will also be further strengthened by this cooperation.
  • Both OpenProject and XWiki are part of the openDesk: Therefore both open source applications can also be jointly procured via ZenDiS as part of the openDesk bundle.

Part of the openDesk initiative

Our partnership is part of larger European initiatives such as openDesk, a modular open source suite for public administration and organizations. Under the leadership of the Center for Digital Sovereignty (ZenDiS), leading open source companies such as OpenProject and XWiki are working closely together here alongside many other well-established open source vendors from Germany and Europe.

For a sovereign digital future

With this partnership, we are sending a strong signal for the open source movement in Europe and worldwide. Together with XWiki, we are providing organizations with tools that enable teams to work independently, securely, and collaboratively without vendor lock-in and without compromises on their data sovereignty.

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Hacking Borders: Our participation in Hack Days 2025 in Paris

Last month, we wrote a blog post about our participation in Hack Days 2025, a hackathon organized by the digital directorate of the French government, DINUM (direction interministérielle du numérique). In this blog post, we’ll tell you what we did, what we learnt and what all this means for digital sovereignty.

The event

Hack Days brought together over 300 talented developers, designers and innovators from 17 countries to collaborate on open source projects, notably DINUM’s own suite of applications for the public sector in France, called LaSuite. The event also aimed at strengthening European digital sovereignty by exploring the potential for cross-border collaboration.

The 53 different teams worked together over the course of three days to design, develop and pitch their projects to juries at the lovely Jourdan campus of the historic École normale supérieur (ENS).

Our own team consisted of Wieland Lindenthal, Dominic Bräunlein, Bruno Pagno, Eric Schubert and Parimal Satyal.

Our pitch

Before we explain the project in more detail below, here’s a clip of our five-minute pitch:

In the first round of the hackathon, the teams made a 3-minute pitch privately to the juries for a chance to be selected in the top 10 projects. OpenProject was luckily one of those ten, and we were then invited to make our 5-minute public pitch (above) the next day.

The jury consisted of Stéphanie Schaer, director of DINUM; Markus Richter, State Secretary at the Federal Ministry for Digital and State Modernization in Germany; Boris Van Hoytema, Quartermaster of the Open Source Program Office within the Ministry of the Interior in the Netherlands; Jean-Baptiste Kempf, the founder of VLC; and Valérie Dagand, managing director of Numeum.

We were very happy to be part of the top three winners, coming in second place.

All the winners on stage after the awards were handed out

We would like to congratulate all the winners of the hackathon:

Our project

For OpenProject, our goal in the hackathon was to build a deep integration with Docs, a collaborative note-taking app that’s part of DINUM’s LaSuite.

Note

Docs also recently joined the openDesk ecosystem initiated by ZenDiS in Germany. OpenDesk brings together powerful open source tools like OpenProject to offer a digital workplace for public institutions. The collaboration between DINUM and ZenDiS around Docs and OpenProject is an example of cross-border cooperation in digital sovereignty.

Docs is built on BlockNote, an open source rich text editor built on the concept of ‘blocks’. A block can be anything from simple text, a heading, a quote, an image or more complex elements like embedded media, file attachments or custom plugins.

We wanted to harness this extensibility to create a two-way integration such that users could seamlessly go from editing a draft text document in Docs to extracting tasks and text to OpenProject, where they can exist and evolve in a project context.

Such an integration made a lot of sense to us to harness what each tool does best. Docs is a powerful medium to jot down ideas and collaborate with other people, but plain text is not actionable. You cannot easily set an assignee, assign dates, track status, add comments, attach files or integrate with GitHub; all that, however, is very simple to do in OpenProject.

Our integration makes it possible to:

  • Write a bullet list in plain text and easily turn it into a set of tasks in OpenProject.
  • Select text from any part of a document and turn it into a user story or work package in OpenProject. We even implemented a basic LLM layer to convert the text to fit a predefined format.
  • Maintain a ‘live’ link between objects: a change in Docs is reflected near-instantly in OpenProject and vice-versa. This makes it possible to avoid content duplication and have a single source of truth.

Enterprise-grade integration

We used open, enterprise-grade standards like OpenID connect to support single sign-on. This is because we believe that ensuring users can be logged in with the same credentials on OpenProject and on Docs is key to making the user experience seamless and increasing user adoption of both tools.

We also wanted to build the integration in as generic a manner as possible. Because Docs is built with BlockNote, we decided to approach the integration as an OpenProject block within the editor itself, which will make it possible for any other application using BlockNote to also integrate with OpenProject. This was important to use because we believe that lowering the cost of integration between open source tools is key to European digital sovereignty.

What we learnt

We were very impressed with the turnout, the excitement around open source, the quality of the teams and the projects and the organization of such an event. Some learnings we came back with:

  • Broad interest in sovereign open source software: The event highlighted a significant interest across Europe in developing sovereign open source software. The turnout and enthusiasm were clear indicators that dependence on American big tech is increasingly a concern and that there’s value in working together with other European open source projects.

  • Diverse strategies across Europe: We observed that different countries have varying strategies for supporting open source development. LaSuite in France has decided, for example, to create and maintain their own forks of open source software, with a consistent UI and UX. Here in Germany, ZenDiS’s approach is to fund the development and integration of existing software that’s served within a unified bundle called openDesk. There is increasing interest in using parts of LaSuite in the Netherlands, too.

  • Power of integrations: The hackathon highlighted the value of integrations in making tools work together seamlessly. These integrations not only enhance user experience by reducing friction when trying to use multiple open source software but can also lead to higher adoption and user satisfaction.

What next?

We were thrilled to take part in the hackathon and were impressed with both what the other teams developed and how well organized it was. We would like to once again thank the LaSuite team for organizing such an inspirational event and for bringing so many like-minded people and companies together! We truly believe that open source is more powerful when we all work together.

We were also pleasantly surprised by the interest in our Docs–OpenProject integration.

What we worked on in the hackathon was of course an incomplete proof of concept, but we certainly don’t expect to leave things at that. We are currently exploring ways to integrate BlockNote more generically with OpenProject and will also evaluate where we can take our integration with Docs.

You will surely hear more more about this from us very soon.

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OpenProject recognized as top project management software in 2026 by Gartner Digital Markets

OpenProject among top products in 2026

We are excited to share that OpenProject has once again been recognized as a top-tier project management solution in 2026 by Gartner Digital Markets.

Building on our achievements from previous years, OpenProject earned an expanded set of distinctions in 2026. These new badges highlight our continued focus on strong functionality, ease of use, and high-quality customer support.

Gartner Digital Markets is a Gartner business unit that includes Capterra, GetApp, and Software Advice. It helps software buyers make confident decisions through verified user reviews, research, and insights.

OpenProject awards in 2026

Software Advice recognitions

In 2026, OpenProject received multiple Software Advice badges across core product categories:

Front Runners in Project management and Time tracking categories

Best Customer Support and Most Recommended across multiple categories in 2026:

Task management, Team management, Project management, Small business project management, Marketing project management, Online project management, Project management software for architects, Nonprofit project management, Strategic planning, Project portfolio management.

Capterra recognition

OpenProject was also recognized by Capterra in 2026 with the following distinctions:

Shortlist in Project management, Time tracking and Task management categories.

Best Value and Best Ease of Use in multiples categories: Construction management, Project management, Project planning, Time tracking, Team management, Task management, Project portfolio management, Nonprofit project management, Strategic planning.

Powered by real user feedback

These recognitions are based on user reviews from real teams using OpenProject in their day-to-day work. We’re proud to see our focus on reliable project delivery, clear collaboration, and strong support reflected in the feedback.

Thank you ❤️

A big thank you to everyone who shared a review and helped us grow. Your input helps us prioritize what matters most and keep improving OpenProject.

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Prioritize what matters: How Attribute highlighting helps growing teams stay focused

Whether you’re a team of five or fifty — as your organization grows, so does the number of projects, tasks, and priorities. At some point, work packages that once fit on one board become a sea of cards, and keeping focus becomes a challenge.

That’s why we created the Attribute highlighting feature: it helps you immediately see what needs your attention most. In this article, we’ll walk you through a relatable scenario and show how this feature can support you in staying focused and scaling successfully.

Important

Before February 2026, Attribute highlighting was part of the Enterprise edition in OpenProject. With the release of version 17.1, it is part of the free Community edition, because we value our Community a lot and aim to give “back” Enterprise add-ons to all users every few releases. You can find more information about this feature in our documentation.


You’ve grown — now it’s time to change how you work

Things might be going well. Your organization is growing. More clients, more projects, more team members. But with growth comes complexity. What used to be a simple backlog is now a multi-project list of dozens — maybe hundreds — of open tasks. And suddenly, you’re no longer sure what’s urgent, what’s blocked, or what’s been waiting for weeks.

Your system hasn’t changed, but your needs have. And that’s a good thing — because it means it’s time to invest in new ways to keep your growing team aligned.

Clean up your work package table by highlighting priority, status or finish date

Let’s take your team’s work package table as an example. Imagine you’ve filtered for this month’s deliverables — but the list is still long. You spot tasks with due dates coming up, some that are marked high priority, and one that was updated just now. But it takes a few minutes of scrolling and reading to get the full picture.

That’s where Attribute highlighting comes in. This feature allows you to visually emphasize specific values in your work package table using color: overdue tasks can turn red, high-priority items might stand out in orange, and different status values can appear in clearly distinguishable shades.

With just a glance, your team can now immediately see:

  • What’s overdue,
  • What’s marked as high or urgent priority,
  • What’s resolved or in progress.

How Attribute highlighting works

Let’s say your team uses the Priority attribute and a custom status workflow. You can highlight individual attributes inline (Status, Priority, Finish date) or apply full-row highlighting based on Status, Type, or Priority.

Once you’ve set this up in the work package table view, your team sees these visual cues automatically — without needing to open each task individually.

Tip

You can configure which colors are used for each priority and status in the System administration. Learn how to adjust them for priorities and for statuses.

Let’s look at an example work package table and how it looks with different attributes highlighted. Please note that you can change the colors for work package attributes and that they might look different in dark mode or light mode.

1. No attribute highlighting

Work package table in OpenProject, no attributes highlighted

Image 1: A work package table in OpenProject, no attributes highlighted.

2. Status, Priority and Finish date highlighted inline

Work package table in OpenProject, inline-highlighted Status, Priority and Finish date

Image 2: A work package table in OpenProject, with inline-highlighted Status, Priority and Finish date.

3. Highlighted by Status

Work package table in OpenProject, highlighted by Status

Image 3: A work package table in OpenProject, highlighted by Status.

4. Highlighted by Type

Work package table in OpenProject, highlighted by Type

Image 4: A work package table in OpenProject, highlighted by Type.

5. Highlighted by Priority

Work package table in OpenProject, highlighted by Priority

Image 5: A work package table in OpenProject, highlighted by Priority.


Other helpful features for prioritizing work packages

Attribute highlighting works best in combination with other prioritization features. Here are a few tools to support your growing team:

  • Work package priorities
    Assign Low, Normal, or High to indicate importance.

  • Status workflows
    Define which status transitions are possible and by whom, helping structure review and approval processes.

  • Date alerts and reminders
    Automatically notify assignees or watchers when a due date is approaching.

  • Versions
    Group work packages under a common version to align delivery and deadlines across tasks.

  • Custom fields
    Add structured information to work packages that you can then use for filtering, highlighting, or grouping.

Each of these features helps you bring structure to complexity — and together, they make it easier to stay focused.


Stay focused as you scale

Growth is exciting — but only sustainable if your tools grow with you. Features like Attribute highlighting can make a real difference: not by changing how you work, but by making it easier to see what matters.

With a growing team and more responsibilities, the ability to focus at a glance isn’t just a nice-to-have — it’s essential. Let OpenProject help you take that next step.

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