Your Plano firm tracks projects in Jira and still can't tell which ones make money: for startups and scale-ups
Custom project management software, or a deep PM-integration build, for a Plano firm runs $70,000 to $170,000 over 4 to 7 months. Asana, Monday, Jira, and ClickUp manage tasks well, so custom work is rarely about task tracking; it's about connecting project work to billing, resourcing, and margin so you can finally tell which projects make money.
Fast-growing companies in Plano cannot afford software that breaks at the next stage of growth. Whether you are early in corporate headquarters and finance, technology and software, telecommunications or already scaling, the goal is the same, ship quickly without piling up technical debt that slows the next hire and the next round. The right partner builds Plano startups a foundation that flexes as headcount, traffic, and revenue climb, so the product keeps pace with the ambition behind it.
Your teams run projects in Jira, Asana, Monday, or ClickUp and tasks get done. The gap is that the PM tool is an island from the rest of the business. It tracks work but not the billing tied to it, the consultant cost behind it, or whether the project is on margin. So you finish a project successfully and still can't say if it was profitable.
For a Plano professional-services or tech firm, this is the core problem from the same family as the CRM (Customer Relationship Management) gap: project, sales, and billing data live in separate systems. The PM tool knows the work, billing knows the invoices, the CRM knows the deal, and nobody has the single view that ties effort to revenue to margin.
Where the off-the-shelf tools fall short
- The PM tool tracks tasks but not billing, cost, or margin, so profitability is invisible
- Resourcing and utilization managed in a spreadsheet beside the PM tool
- Project, sales, and billing data in separate systems with no shared view
- Scope and budget overruns surface only after the project is done and the money is gone
Custom project management: what Plano teams actually get
Custom PM work pays off when you need project, billing, and resourcing in one connected view and the off-the-shelf tools can't span that gap. Often you keep Jira or Asana for task execution and build the layer that ties effort to cost to revenue, giving you live project margin and utilization instead of a post-mortem guess.
Feature priorities for Plano teams
Project Management services we deliver in Plano
Everything a project management build here can cover: task management, Gantt charts, resource scheduling, Asana alternative and Monday.com alternative.
- You can't tell which projects are profitable because cost and revenue are disconnected
- Resourcing lives in a spreadsheet beside the PM tool
- Project, sales, and billing data need to live in one connected view
- Overruns surface too late to do anything about them
- Your PM tool's native reporting and add-ons cover your needs
- Projects are simple enough that margin is easy to track manually
- You don't run enough concurrent projects to justify a custom layer
- Task tracking, not profitability, is your only real need
The honest cost picture for Plano
| Project scope | Typical cost | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Project-to-billing and margin integration layer | $70k to $110k | 4 to 5 months |
| Add resourcing, utilization, and portfolio reporting | $120k to $150k | 5 to 7 months |
| Full custom PM platform with deep integrations | $150k to $170k+ | 6 to 9 months |
Timeline: what happens, and when
Exactly what you get
A layer that turns task tracking into profitability tracking. Your teams keep running projects in Jira, Asana, or your PM tool, and this build ties effort to cost to revenue so you get live margin per project and service line instead of a post-mortem guess. Resourcing and utilization connect to real project data instead of a side spreadsheet, and budget overruns get flagged while you can still act. It ties project, sales, and billing data into one view, which is why it pairs so closely with custom CRM development, ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) software development, and business intelligence dashboards for a firm that lives on project margin.
How to choose a developer in Plano
Choose a team that leads with billing and margin integration, not task features, because task tracking is the part you already have. Ask how they tie effort to revenue and what data quality, time tracking, cost rates, they need for margin to be trustworthy; a good developer is honest that garbage in means garbage out. Require early-warning on overruns so the system is actionable, not just reportable. Confirm they understand your engagement and billing models, since that's what makes the margin math correct.
- Live project margin because effort, cost, and revenue finally sit in one view
- Resourcing and utilization connected to real project data, not a side spreadsheet
- Budget and scope overruns flagged while you can still act, not after
- Project, sales, and billing data tied together across systems
- Better project selection because you can see what kind of work is actually profitable
- You're adding a layer, so you maintain integrations to the PM and billing tools
- Teams may resist a new layer if it adds tracking overhead without obvious benefit
- If your PM tool's native reporting and add-ons suffice, custom is unnecessary
- Accurate margin depends on accurate time and cost data, which is a discipline problem too
- !Wants to replace Jira or Asana; ask why a margin layer wouldn't deliver more value
- !No billing integration plan; ask how effort ties to revenue
- !Ignores time and cost data quality; ask what's needed for accurate margin
- !No early-warning on overruns; ask how budget problems surface in time
- !Quotes before understanding your engagements; ask what billing models it assumes
Teams investing in project management in Plano usually scope it next to field service management, booking & scheduling, mobile app, since these systems share data and budgets.
Rohan advises mid-market and enterprise teams on ERP, CRM and custom software, and has led delivery on dozens of business-software builds.
Writes for Digital Heroes, shipping business software for 2,000+ brands across 55+ countries since 2017.
Frequently asked questions
Should we replace Jira or Asana?
Usually not. They handle task execution well, and your teams know them. The gap is that they don't connect work to billing and margin. A layer that integrates with your existing PM tool and ties effort to revenue delivers the profitability view without disrupting how teams run projects day to day.
Why can't we tell which projects are profitable?
Because project effort, consultant cost, and revenue live in separate systems, the PM tool, payroll or the cost model, and billing. Without tying them together, you see that a project finished but not whether it made money. Connecting those data sources is exactly what gives you live margin.
What's needed for the margin numbers to be accurate?
Reliable time tracking, accurate cost rates per person, and clean billing data. The software computes margin, but only as well as the inputs allow. A good developer is upfront that this is partly a discipline problem and helps you tighten time and cost capture as part of the project.
How does this catch overruns earlier?
By tracking budget burn against the plan in real time and alerting when a project trends over on hours or scope. Instead of discovering the overrun at close, you see it forming and can adjust scope, staffing, or the client conversation while it still matters.