[INSERT INTRO VIDEO]
When you've done the hard work. Your team is in, the workspace is live, and week one is behind you.
The habit is forming right now – and the next two weeks are where it either takes root or fades back into how things used to be. The difference between those two outcomes is smaller than you'd think, and most of it comes down to structure.
By the end of this lesson, you'll know how to make Todoist part of how your team already works – so the momentum you've built keeps going.
How habits form
Every habit runs on the same three-part loop: a cue that triggers the behavior, the routine itself, and a reward that reinforces it.
In week one, the reward is novelty – opening a new app, seeing tasks organized in a way they weren't before. That's enough to keep people coming back. But novelty fades, and when it does, the loop needs something more reliable to keep running.
The cue is what most rollouts are missing. Without a consistent trigger – a moment that says "now is when we check Todoist" – the brain has no reliable signal to start the routine. That's why teams drift back to email: email has a cue (a notification, a morning habit of opening it) that Todoist hasn't built yet.
Building the cue is what the next section is about.
Finding the anchor
Every durable habit is attached to something that already exists. Behavioral science calls this habit stacking – pairing a new behavior with an existing routine that already happens consistently. The existing routine becomes the cue. The new behavior gets carried along with it.
The most reliable anchor for most teams is the weekly standup or team meeting. Instead of running it from memory or a separate list, open the team view in Todoist and run through assigned tasks together – who owns what, what's overdue, what's coming up. The meeting was already happening, so Todoist just becomes part of how it runs.
Meeting agendas are another natural fit. Add agenda items for recurring meetings as tasks in a shared project before the call starts. Any actions that come out of the meeting get added to Todoist before it ends. Over time, opening Todoist becomes part of how the team prepares for and closes out every meeting – not an extra step, but part of the flow.
For champions who want the habit visible across the team, a regular check-in on Reporting works well. Opening Reporting at the start of the week – and sharing what you see – signals that Todoist is where progress gets tracked and reviewed. When people know it's being looked at, keeping it current becomes part of how they work.
Примечание
Before you move on: Identify one recurring moment in your team's week and decide that Todoist will be part of it, every time. Write it down. That commitment, made now and communicated with the team, is what carries the momentum through.
You've got everything you need
You've covered the human side of rollouts: why resistance happens, how to diagnose where your team is stuck, how to make the case for each person, how to handle pushback, and how to build a habit that holds.
Now for the practical side. The Todoist Champion courses cover how to set up your workspace, structure your first projects, and run a launch your team will actually show up for. Whenever you’re ready, head there next – and start building!