Linear Introduction
Linear is a project management tool built for software development teams. Teams use Linear to plan work, track bugs, ship features, and stay coordinated — all inside one fast, clean interface.
What Is Linear
Linear is a web-based tool that helps teams manage their work through issues, projects, and cycles. It was built for speed — every page loads instantly, and every action happens without delay.
Think of Linear as a digital task board for your whole team. Each piece of work becomes an "issue," related issues group into a "project," and everything lives inside a shared "workspace."
Linear Structure at a Glance
Workspace (Your company account)
│
├── Team: Engineering
│ ├── Project: Mobile App v2
│ │ ├── Issue: Fix login bug
│ │ ├── Issue: Add dark mode
│ │ └── Issue: Improve load speed
│ └── Cycle: Week 1–2 (active sprint)
│
└── Team: Design
├── Project: Brand Refresh
│ ├── Issue: Redesign logo
│ └── Issue: Update color palette
└── Cycle: Week 1–2
Key Terms Explained
Linear uses specific words for each part of the tool. Learning these terms first makes everything else easier to understand.
| Linear Term | Plain English Meaning | Real-World Comparison |
|---|---|---|
| Workspace | Your company's home in Linear | An office building |
| Team | A group working on related tasks | A department (e.g., Engineering) |
| Project | A collection of issues with one goal | A product launch plan |
| Issue | One task, bug, or feature request | A task on a sticky note |
| Cycle | A fixed time block for completing work | A two-week sprint |
| Roadmap | A visual plan showing project timelines | A calendar of upcoming launches |
The Problem Linear Solves
Many teams use project management tools that are slow, cluttered, and hard to navigate. Pages take seconds to load, menus are buried, and finding the right task requires too many clicks.
Linear fixes this with a keyboard-first design, instant load times, and a clean interface that removes unnecessary clutter. Engineers and product managers spend less time managing the tool and more time doing actual work.
How Linear Compares to Traditional PM Tools
| Problem | Traditional Tools | Linear |
|---|---|---|
| Page speed | Slow loading, frequent lag | Loads instantly every time |
| Navigation | Multiple clicks to reach a task | Keyboard shortcuts for everything |
| Interface | Cluttered with too many options | Clean and focused layout |
| Ownership | Unclear who handles which task | Every issue has one clear owner |
| Developer fit | Generic for all industries | Built specifically for tech teams |
Who Uses Linear
Software startups and technology companies use Linear most. Engineering teams track bugs and features. Product managers plan releases. Designers link their work to development tasks.
Linear works for teams of 2 to 2,000 people. Small teams get a simple, fast task manager. Large organizations get advanced tools like roadmaps, automation, analytics, and a full API.
Core Features Overview
| Feature | What It Does | Best Used By |
|---|---|---|
| Issues | Tracks every task, bug, and request | All team members |
| Projects | Groups related issues under one goal | Project and product managers |
| Cycles | Manages work in short, timed periods | Engineering and dev leads |
| Roadmap | Shows the big-picture plan visually | Product managers and executives |
| Integrations | Connects Linear to GitHub, Slack, Figma | Developers and designers |
| Analytics | Measures team output and velocity | Team leads and managers |
| Automation | Runs repetitive actions automatically | All power users |
The Linear Method
Linear's creators published a set of principles called the Linear Method. These principles guide how teams should use the tool effectively.
Core Principles of the Linear Method
- Write issues, not meeting agendas. Good documentation in issues replaces many status meetings.
- Keep issues small and focused. Each issue should describe one specific piece of work.
- Use cycles for time-boxed work. Commit to a set amount of work each cycle, then deliver it.
- Move fast and close issues. Closed issues signal progress. Open issues should stay actionable.
- Prioritize ruthlessly. Only put urgent and important work into the active cycle.
Learning the Linear Method alongside the tool helps teams get the most value from their Linear setup.
