Getting Started with Aurora
A step-by-step guide to setting up your workspace, inviting your team, and shipping your first project with Aurora.
Every great product starts with a first step. Whether you’re a solo founder or leading a team of fifty engineers, Aurora is designed to get out of your way and let you focus on what matters: shipping great work.
Setting Up Your Workspace
The first thing you’ll do after signing up is create your workspace. Think of it as your team’s home base — a single place where projects, tasks, and conversations live together.
Choose a name that reflects your team or organization. You can always change it later, but a clear name helps when you start inviting collaborators. Aurora automatically sets up a few starter projects to help you explore the interface.
Inviting Your Team
Collaboration is at the heart of Aurora. From your workspace settings, you can invite team members by email. They’ll receive a link that drops them directly into your workspace with the right permissions already configured.
We recommend starting with a small pilot group — three to five people who are comfortable trying new tools. Let them explore for a week before rolling out to the broader team. This gives you time to configure workflows and establish conventions.
Pro tip: Use Aurora’s role system to set appropriate access levels. Not everyone needs admin access, and limiting it reduces the chance of accidental configuration changes.
Creating Your First Project
Projects in Aurora are flexible containers. They can represent a product, a sprint, a client engagement, or any other scope that makes sense for your team.
When creating a project, you’ll choose from several views:
- Board view for Kanban-style workflows with drag-and-drop cards
- List view for a structured, spreadsheet-like layout
- Timeline view for projects with dependencies and deadlines
- Calendar view for date-driven work like content schedules
Each project can switch between views at any time. Your data doesn’t change — only the way you see it.
Establishing Your Workflow
Aurora ships with sensible defaults, but the real power comes from customization. Define your own task statuses, create custom fields, and set up automation rules that eliminate repetitive work.
For example, you might create a rule that automatically assigns a reviewer when a task moves to “Ready for Review,” or one that sends a Slack notification when a high-priority task is overdue.
“The best tool is the one that adapts to your process, not the other way around. Aurora understood this from day one.”
Integrating Your Tools
Aurora connects with the tools your team already uses. Set up integrations with Slack for notifications, GitHub for code tracking, Figma for design handoffs, and dozens more.
The integration setup takes about two minutes per tool. Once connected, Aurora pulls in relevant context automatically — no manual copy-pasting between apps.
What’s Next
Once you’ve completed the initial setup, explore Aurora’s analytics dashboard. It provides real-time insights into team velocity, bottleneck detection, and workload distribution. These metrics become more valuable over time as Aurora learns your team’s patterns.
The key to getting value from any project management tool is consistency. Use it for everything, even small tasks, and the compound benefits will become clear within a few weeks. Start small, iterate often, and let Aurora handle the coordination so you can focus on the craft.