Okay, let me tell you about this thing that happened recently. It started simply enough. We, my small team and I, figured we needed a way to keep track of who was doing what on our shared tasks. You know, just a simple system, something clearer than the random emails and scribbled notes we were using.

So, I took the lead. Said I’d find a tool. Easy peasy, right? Wrong. I jumped online, started searching for ‘task management’ or ‘simple project tools’. Man, it was like stepping into the biggest, brightest, most insane candy aisle you’ve ever seen. Suddenly, hundreds, maybe thousands of options were screaming at me. Shiny wrappers everywhere. This app does this, that platform does that, this one integrates with your coffee machine probably. It was just… a lot.
Way Too Much Sugar
I felt like a kid with a dollar, staring at a wall of candy stretching to the ceiling. You got your Kanban boards, your Gantt charts, your to-do lists on steroids. Some looked cool, some looked serious, some just looked confusing. My brain kinda overloaded. I started clicking, reading reviews, watching demo videos. Each one promised to solve all our problems forever.
I must’ve spent a good chunk of my day just falling down this rabbit hole. Signed up for a few free trials. Tried dragging virtual cards around. Made notes. Started comparing features. Feature A vs Feature B. Price point X vs Price point Y. Integration Z… did we even need Integration Z? Probably not.
Then I made the mistake of trying to get everyone else involved too early. Showed them a few options. Chaos. One person liked the colors on tool number one. Another person insisted we needed the super complex reporting features of tool number two, even though we track maybe five tasks a week. Someone else just wanted to stick to email because ‘new things are hard’.
- We spent an hour debating the merits of virtual highlighters.
- Someone got really hung up on the font used in the notification emails.
- I tried to demo one tool, and we spent 20 minutes figuring out how to add a user.
It got ridiculous. We were burning more time arguing about the tool than we would ever save using the tool. It felt like arguing about whether cherry or grape flavour was objectively ‘better’ when all we needed was a quick sugar hit.

So, what happened? After all that noise, all that distraction, all those shiny options in the candy aisle? We kinda just… stopped looking. We went back to our slightly improved shared document and a basic checklist. Not perfect. Not fancy. But it worked. It took us five minutes to set up, not five days of arguing.
Guess the lesson was, sometimes that massive candy aisle isn’t helpful. Sometimes all those choices just distract you from the simple thing you actually need. We didn’t need the world’s best, most feature-packed candy. We just needed a basic chocolate bar, and maybe we already had one in our pocket. Took a walk down that crazy aisle to figure that out.