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Microsoft Planner for Small Consulting Firms IT Compliance AI Projects

For small consulting firms that juggle IT consulting, regulatory/compliance engagements, and AI‑automation projects, Microsoft Planner can be your lightweight “mission control” without the overhead of heavy project‑management platforms. Planner sits inside Microsoft 365, integrates with Teams and Outlook, and lets you manage multiple client engagements, track deliverables, and keep partners aligned, all on a single card‑based board.

In this post, we shall explore how a small consulting team can structure Planner for client work, plus how to use and extend Planner’s built‑in templates to create your own consulting blueprints.


When Planner fits a small consulting practice

If your team is 3–8 consultants working across IT, compliance (FATF/AML/KYC), and AI/automation, Planner is ideal when:

  • You create one plan per client engagement (e.g., Client A – IT Audit, Client B – AI Automation).
  • You standardize the consulting lifecycle (Discovery → Planning → Execution → Review → Closure) across plans.
  • Tasks are clearly assigned to the right consultant (IT, compliance, or AI) with due dates and labels such as High priority, Regulatory Deadline, or AI‑Model‑Training.

This approach reduces email threads, WhatsApp groups, and manual status updates while keeping everyone confident about what’s going on.


Example 1: IT consulting engagement

Plan name: Client X – IT Infrastructure Review

Buckets:

  • Discovery & Scoping
  • Assessment & Testing
  • Reporting & Recommendations
  • Client Review
  • Closed

Sample tasks:

  • Gather current IT environment details
    • Assignee: IT Consultant
    • Due date: 1 week
    • Bucket: Discovery & Scoping
    • Labels: Data‑collection, Client‑facing
  • Perform vulnerability scan and network assessment
    • Assignee: IT Consultant
    • Due date: 2 weeks
    • Bucket: Assessment & Testing
  • Draft IT review report with action plan
    • Assignee: Lead Consultant / Partner
    • Due date: 3 weeks
    • Bucket: Reporting & Recommendations

Using the Timeline view, the managing partner can see how assessments, meetings, and report writing overlap and adjust deadlines before the client review.


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Example 2: Compliance & regulatory consulting

Plan name: Client Y – FATF / AML Compliance Review

Compliance projects often have tight regulatory windows and detailed checklists, so Planner becomes a checklist‑centric workspace.

Buckets:

  • Gap Analysis
  • Policy Drafting
  • Control Implementation
  • Audit & Evidence
  • Submission & Closure

Sample tasks:

  • Map current AML policies to FATF requirements
    • Assignee: Compliance Consultant
    • Due date: 10 business days
    • Bucket: Gap Analysis
    • Labels: Regulatory, High priority
  • Draft updated KYC procedure
    • Assignee: Compliance Consultant
    • Due date: 15 days
    • Bucket: Policy Drafting
    • Checklist:
      • Draft procedure
      • Get legal review
      • Finalize with client
  • Collect evidence for auditors
    • Assignee: Engagement Manager
    • Due date: 1 week before audit
    • Bucket: Audit & Evidence

The People view helps the partner see who is overloaded across multiple compliance engagements and rebalance work before audit deadlines.


Example 3: AI / automation consulting

Plan name: Client Z – AI Automation for Finance Processes

AI‑automation projects blend discovery, data analysis, and pilot‑run phases, so Planner becomes your cross‑functional tracking layer.

Buckets:

  • Discovery & Use‑case
  • Data & Process Analysis
  • Automation Design
  • Build & Test
  • Pilot & Training
  • Handover & Closure

Sample tasks:

  • Identify top 3 candidate processes for automation
    • Assignee: AI Consultant
    • Due date: 1 week
    • Bucket: Discovery & Use‑case
  • Map existing invoice‑approval workflow
    • Assignee: Process Analyst
    • Due date: 2 weeks
    • Bucket: Data & Process Analysis
  • Design automation workflow (Power Automate / custom scripts)
    • Assignee: AI / Automation Engineer
    • Due date: 3 weeks
    • Bucket: Automation Design
  • Run pilot with finance team
    • Assignee: Project Lead + AI Consultant
    • Due date: 4 weeks
    • Bucket: Pilot & Training

The Timeline and People views help you visualize how data‑gathering, design, and testing phases overlap and ensure AI, IT, and process consultants stay aligned on handover dates.


Out‑of‑the‑box Planner templates

Microsoft Planner ships with several built‑in plan templates that you can adapt for consulting work:

  1. Simple Task List
    • Basic buckets: To Do, In Progress, Done.
    • Useful for ad‑hoc internal projects (e.g., “Internal AI training rollout”).
  2. Simple Project
    • Adds Backlog, To Do, In Progress, Done.
    • Fits short‑term client engagements or quick compliance checks.
  3. Agile Task Board
    • Resembles Scrum: Product Backlog, Sprint Backlog, Doing, Done.
    • Works well for AI‑automation or software‑related consulting where you run in sprints.
  4. Content Calendar
    • Time‑based buckets: Draft, Review, Scheduled, Published.
    • Useful if your consulting firm runs thought‑leadership content or client newsletters.

When you create a new plan, you can select a template and then rename buckets and labels to match your consulting workflow (e.g., Discovery, Planning, Execution, Review, Closed).


How to extend and reuse Planner templates

Planner doesn’t expose a deep “template engine,” but you can create your own consulting blueprints and reuse them across projects.

1. Build a template plan once

  • Create a detailed plan for a common engagement type (e.g., Template – IT Audit).
  • Set up the buckets, labels, and a generic set of tasks (requirements‑gathering, assessment, reporting, etc.).
  • Use generic roles for assignees (e.g., IT Consultant, Compliance Lead) instead of real people.

2. Copy the template for new clients

  • Open the template plan → click the **- – – ** menu → Copy plan.
  • Name it for the new client (e.g., Client A – IT Audit – 2026).
  • Update task details, due dates, and real assignees for that engagement.

This gives you reusable templates for IT audits, compliance reviews, and AI‑automation projects while staying within Planner’s native features.

3. Enhance with Microsoft 365 and automation

  • Link your Planner plans to Teams channels for each client so discussions, tasks, and files live together.
  • Use Power Automate or Copilot Studio to auto‑create Planner tasks from intake forms, SharePoint lists, or email triggers (e.g., when a new compliance request is submitted).
  • Connect Planner to Outlook Tasks so consultants can track personal to‑dos alongside project work.

For a small consulting practice handling IT, compliance, and AI automation, we recommend:

  • One plan per client engagement.
  • One plan per internal capability (e.g., AI Lab Projects, Compliance Training Pipeline).
  • Standardized bucket sequences for each service line:
    • IT: Discovery, Assessment, Reporting, Client Review, Closed
    • Compliance: Gap Analysis, Policy Drafting, Control Implementation, Audit & Evidence, Closure
    • AI/Automation: Discovery, Data Analysis, Design, Build & Test, Pilot, Handover

Use common labels such as:

  • Service lines: IT‑Consulting, Compliance, AI‑Automation
  • Risk/priority: High Priority, Regulatory Deadline, Client‑Facing

Each week, run a 15‑minute Planner standup where the managing partner reviews:

  • The Board and Timeline to spot overdue or at‑risk tasks.
  • The People view to detect overload and balance workloads.
  • The bucket flow to confirm projects are moving smoothly from discovery to closure.

Hope this topic provides enough information for you to start using Microsoft Planner effectively.

Jitendra Chaudhary
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