Creating a Project Record

Using Project Management, you can create project records to track projects and tasks you need to complete. Project records can capture basic information about your project, such as customer, start date, and status. You can add more detailed information about your project to capture financial, resource, and budget information.

Important:

NetSuite advises you to break up long, multi-year projects into smaller parts to improve performance when working with project records.

To create a project record:

  1. Go to Lists > Relationships > Projects > New.

    You can also click New Project in the New menu at the top of most pages to create a new project for the current Customer.

  2. Under Primary Information:

    1. In the Custom Form field, select the form you want to use to enter this record. This field only appears when you have at least one custom form. You can customize this form by clicking Customize at the top of the page.

    2. The Project ID field displays either the ID that has been entered in the Project Name field or an auto-generated ID.

      • In the Auto check box next to Project ID, clear the box to manually enter a name for this record in the Project Name field.

      • If you leave this box checked, NetSuite assigns a name or number for this record based on your settings at Setup > Company > Auto-Generated Numbers.

    3. In the Project Name field, enter the name of the project.

      This name fills in the Project ID field unless you use auto-numbering. Enter a unique project name. If you use Auto-Generated Numbering, it is important that you enter the project name here because the Project ID does not include the project name.

    4. If this project is associated with a customer, select them in the Customer field.

      Note:

      After a customer has been selected, it cannot be changed on the project record when there are transactions, actual time, actual charge, child project, contact (if Company field holds a project) or personalized Rate Card associated with the project. Mentioned actions remove the Change a customer button. If you create a new project from the Actions menu at the top of an existing project, the new project record is automatically linked to the current project’s customer. To change a project’s customer, in View mode, click the Change Customer button. You can only select a new customer that supports the same currency and subsidiary as the original customer.

      Note:

      Projects that are not associated with a customer cannot be used on transactions.

    5. In the Project Manager field, select a project resource to serve as the project manager for this project. Only employees with both the Project Resource and Project Manager fields checked on the Human Resources subtab of their employee records appear in the Project Manager field.

      Project managers can approve and update time entries submitted for their assigned projects.

    6. In the Status field, select the status that indicates the progress of the project.

      You can create new statuses at Setup > Accounting > Accounting Lists > New > Project Status.

    7. If you use NetSuite OneWorld, in the Subsidiary field, select the subsidiary to associate with this project.

      For more information, see Working with Project Management in OneWorld.

      Note:

      After a transaction has posted for the project, you are not able to change the customer or subsidiary selected on the project record.

    8. If you would like to apply a project template to this new project record, select the template in the Project Template field. For more information about project templates, see Project Templates.

  3. Under Project Dates, if you also use the Planned Work feature, in the Scheduling Method field, select Forward or Backward.

    • If you know the date your project must begin, select Forward and enter the estimated date work will start on the project. You can change this date at any time during the life of the project. NetSuite schedules all project tasks without predecessors to start on this date.

    • If you know the date your project must end, select Backward and enter the estimated date work must be completed. You can change this date at any time during the life of the project. NetSuite schedules all project tasks without successors to end on this date.

    For more information on scheduling methods and planned work, see Project Scheduling Methods and Planned Work. The remaining fields under Project Dates are populated after the project is saved and tasks are created.

  4. Click the Financial subtab to enter financial information about this project. For more information, see Project Billing Schedule Types.

  5. If you use the Project Budgeting feature, click the Budget subtab and enter budget information for this project record. For more information, see Creating Project Budgets.

    Note:

    Projects with budgets displaying more than 20 categories will experience slower performance. It is recommended that you add only the most commonly used budget categories when creating project budgets. For more information on selecting categories for project budgets, see Setting Up Project Budgeting.

  6. Click the Relationships subtab to enter contacts for this project.

  7. Click the Communication subtab to enter phone calls, CRM tasks, events, attach files, and create user notes for this record. For more information, see Communication.

  8. Click the Preferences subtab to select preferences to apply to this project. For more information, see Setting Up Project Record Preferences.

  9. When you have finished, click Save.

After you save a project record, additional information can be entered on the Resources and Schedule subtabs when you view or edit the project record. For more information, see Assigning Project Resources and Working with Project Records.

When using Charged-Based Billing and Project Revenue Recognition, you can now customize which actions are triggered by the status of your projects. These triggers are also available for custom statuses.

For more information, see Charge-Based Project Billing and Project Revenue Recognition.

Related Topics:

General Notices