When should teams stop using spreadsheets for resource planning?

TL;DR

  • Spreadsheets work for resource planning only when teams are small and plans rarely change.
  • Teams should stop using spreadsheets once projects overlap, people are shared across work, or plans change weekly.
  • Spreadsheets break down when capacity needs to be updated frequently or forecasted into the future.
  • At that point, lack of visibility creates delivery risk, burnout, and reactive planning.

Table of Contents

Why teams start with spreadsheets

Spreadsheets are often the first tool teams use for resource planning because they are:

  • Familiar and easy to set up
  • Flexible for simple scenarios
  • Low-cost or free
  • Adequate for very small teams

For a single project or a small team with stable plans, spreadsheets can be enough.

When spreadsheets begin to break down 

Spreadsheets start to fail when planning becomes dynamic.

This usually happens when:

  • Multiple projects run at the same time
  • People are assigned across different teams or clients
  • Timelines change frequently
  • Planning extends beyond a few weeks

At this stage, spreadsheets struggle to reflect reality fast enough.

Common warning signs spreadsheets no longer work 

Teams often outgrow spreadsheets when they notice:

  • Frequent double-booking of people
  • Manual updates taking significant time
  • Conflicting versions of the same plan
  • Overload discovered only after deadlines slip
  • Difficulty forecasting capacity 1 to 3 months ahead

These are signals that planning has become reactive.

What spreadsheets cannot handle well 

Spreadsheets are limited when it comes to:

Real-time capacity visibility 

Spreadsheets do not automatically recalculate capacity as plans change, making overload easy to miss.

Cross-project dependencies 

When people work across multiple projects, spreadsheets become complex and fragile.

Scenario planning 

Answering “what if” questions requires duplicating files and manual recalculation.

Ongoing forecasting 

Spreadsheets are not designed for continuous, forward-looking planning.

How teams typically outgrow spreadsheets 

Most teams follow a similar pattern:

  1. Use spreadsheets for early planning
  2. Add complexity as work increases
  3. Spend more time maintaining the sheet than planning
  4. Lose confidence in the data
  5. Experience delivery or staffing issues

At this point, spreadsheets slow teams down rather than helping them plan.

When spreadsheets are still sufficient

Spreadsheets can still work if:

  • The team is very small
  • Only one project runs at a time
  • Plans change infrequently
  • Forecasting beyond 1 to 2 weeks is not needed
  • Work is not constrained by shared specialists

Once these conditions change, spreadsheets become a risk.

Frequently asked questions

Can spreadsheets support basic resource planning? 

Yes. For small teams with stable plans and minimal overlap, spreadsheets can be sufficient.

What is the biggest risk of using spreadsheets too long? 

The biggest risk is hidden overload. Problems are discovered late, when timelines or people are already under pressure.

Do teams need software immediately after spreadsheets? 

Not immediately. The transition usually happens when planning complexity increases and manual updates become unreliable.

Sources 

PMI library: Resource planning and scheduling challenges
https://www.pmi.org/learning/library/resource-leveling-scheduling-projects-6007

Atlassian: Resource planning with spreadsheets vs tools
https://www.atlassian.com/work-management/project-management/resource-planning

Harvard Business Review: Why planning tools break at scale
https://hbr.org/2018/06/managing-professional-services-firms 

IBM: Capacity planning limitations
https://www.ibm.com/topics/capacity-planning