Enterprise project management software: Summary & key takeaways
Enterprise PM software solves a specific problem: managing complex, cross-functional projects at scale with portfolio visibility, resource capacity planning, and financial governance built in.
This article compares 10 tools: I reviewed each on scalability, resource management, portfolio oversight, integrations, AI capabilities, and pricing transparency.
Teamwork.com leads for client services teams: purpose-built for agencies and professional services firms that need profitability tracking alongside project delivery.
Pricing varies widely: free tiers exist for most tools, but enterprise plans typically require a sales conversation.
I've spent years watching teams outgrow their PM tools. Visibility disappeared the moment headcount crossed 50. According to Teamwork.com's 6 Strategic Shifts for 2026 report, 92% of business leaders say their current tech falls short on data management and reporting. Half believe they're losing revenue due to those inefficiencies.
That stat didn't surprise me. What surprised me was how many teams accept it as normal.
I work at Teamwork.com, so I'm starting with the platform I know best. This article breaks down 10 enterprise PM tools I've evaluated for 2026. You'll get feature highlights, honest limitations, verified pricing, and a comparison table to speed up your evaluation.
What is enterprise project management software?
I've seen teams conflate basic PM tools with true enterprise PM software. That gap is usually where missed deadlines and margin erosion hide. Enterprise project management software is a platform built to plan, execute, and govern projects across large organizations. It addresses problems that surface at scale: resource allocation across hundreds of people, portfolio management across dozens of active projects, and financial oversight.
For a full breakdown of the concept, methodologies, and benefits, see our enterprise project management guide.
How I reviewed and selected these tools
I evaluated these 10 tools through the lens of someone managing enterprise client work. My background is in agency operations, where missed deadlines hit margins and resource gaps hit revenue. Here's what I looked for:
Scalability: Can this tool support 100+ users across multiple departments without performance issues or workflow compromises?
Resource management: Does it offer real capacity planning, skills-based assignment, and utilization tracking, or just basic task allocation?
Portfolio visibility: Can leadership see project health, budgets, and timelines across the entire portfolio in one view?
Financial governance: Does the tool track budgets, profitability, and billable time at the project level?
Integration depth: Does it connect with the ERP, CRM, and communication tools enterprises already use?
AI and automation: Does it go beyond rule-based triggers into predictive or intelligent workflow support?
Pricing transparency: Does the vendor publish clear pricing, or is everything hidden behind "contact sales"?
Before you start evaluating tools, check whether you actually need enterprise-grade PM software.
Self-audit checklist: Do you need enterprise PM software?
Your team has 50+ people working across multiple projects simultaneously
You need portfolio-level visibility across departments or business units
Resource allocation decisions are made in spreadsheets or ad hoc
You lack real-time data on project profitability or budget burn rate
Compliance, audit trails, or role-based access control are business requirements
ACTION: If you answer "yes" to two or more, you've outgrown basic PM tools
Quick glance: 10 best enterprise project management software tools
Tool
Teamwork.com
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I work at Teamwork.com, so I'll be upfront about that. I chose to work here because the platform solved problems I couldn't fix with any other tool during my years in client services. Teamwork.com is project management software built for client services: agencies, consultancies, and professional services firms that need to track profitability alongside delivery.
In my experience, the real differentiator for enterprise teams is how it connects project execution to financial performance. You're not just tracking tasks. You're tracking whether those tasks are making or losing money.
Best features
See exact margin on every project: Profitability tracking shows real-time profit margins based on billable hours, rates, and budgets. In my experience, teams that connect delivery to financial data catch margin erosion weeks earlier.
Know who's overbooked before it's a problem: Workload planning shows availability, overallocation, and capacity gaps across your team. Our customer Invanity cut project planning time by 50% after switching to Teamwork.com. Weekly workload management effort dropped 80%.
Faster project setup: Generate a full project plan from a brief in minutes, complete with task breakdown, time estimates, and resource suggestions. The AI Project Wizard doesn't replace planning judgment, but it cuts setup time significantly.
Transparent client collaboration: External stakeholders can review progress, approve deliverables, and leave feedback through a dedicated client portal without needing full platform access. This keeps clients in the loop without exposing internal workflows.
Portfolio-wide budget visibility: See budget status across all active projects in a single view, with burn rate and forecasted completion cost. The Budget Insights Report is where enterprise teams managing 50+ concurrent projects catch overruns before they hit the P&L.
Limitations
The free plan supports only 5 users, which is fine for evaluation but won't cover an enterprise pilot
Advanced reporting and profitability features require the Accelerate tier or higher
Pricing:
Free: $0 (up to 5 users)
Basics: $9.99/user/month (billed yearly)
Accelerate: $24.99/user/month (billed yearly)
Optimize: Contact sales
Enterprise: Contact sales
Source: Teamwork.com pricing page
Ratings and reviews
"Teamwork is an impressive project management platform that powers our agency. I use it every day to manage my team's tasks, review deadlines, steps in various project approval processes, and manage day-to-day work so I can stay on task and see top priority projects and progress happening each week." — Christopher F., Group Lead, Search Engine Optimization, G2
Wrike
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Wrike shows up in nearly every enterprise PM shortlist I've reviewed, and for good reason. It positions itself as a versatile work management platform for cross-functional teams, and its strength is workflow flexibility combined with deep integrations.
Best features
Custom workflows: Wrike lets teams build multi-stage approval workflows tailored to their department's process. Marketing, IT, and operations can each run their own workflow within the same workspace.
Proofing and approvals: Built-in proofing tools let teams annotate images, PDFs, and videos directly inside the platform, removing a layer of tool switching for creative teams.
Cross-tagging and shared projects: Projects can be visible across multiple teams and spaces without duplication, useful when a single deliverable touches three or four departments.
Limitations
The free plan is limited in features; most enterprise functionality requires the Business or Pinnacle tier
Pricing for Pinnacle and Apex plans is not publicly listed, making it harder to compare at the enterprise level
The interface can feel cluttered for new users given the volume of configuration options
Pricing:
Free: $0
Team: $10/user/month (billed annually)
Business: $25/user/month (billed annually)
Pinnacle: Contact sales
Apex: Contact sales
Source: Wrike pricing page
Smartsheet
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In my experience, teams migrating from spreadsheets tend to adopt Smartsheet first because the grid format is familiar. Smartsheet bridges the gap between spreadsheets and project management, with automation, dashboards, and reporting layered on top.
Best features
Sheet-based flexibility: Teams that think in rows and columns can start managing projects without learning a new interface. The familiar grid format reduces onboarding friction significantly.
Automations engine: Smartsheet's automation builder supports multi-step conditional workflows for alerts, approvals, and status updates. Enterprise teams use these to standardize repeatable processes across departments.
Resource management (add-on): The resource management module (formerly 10,000ft) provides capacity planning and utilization tracking. It's a separate add-on, but it connects directly to Smartsheet projects.
Limitations
Resource management is a paid add-on rather than included in core plans
The Pro plan limits the number of sheets and lacks the reporting depth enterprises need
The spreadsheet-first approach can feel limiting for teams that prefer visual boards or timeline views
Pricing:
Pro: $9/member/month (billed yearly)
Business: $19/member/month (billed yearly)
Enterprise: Contact sales
Advanced Work Management: Custom pricing
Source: Smartsheet pricing page
monday.com
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I've seen monday.com gain traction in organizations where the operations team, not IT, drives tool selection. Its strength is customization: boards, dashboards, and automations that non-technical users can configure without code.
Best features
Visual board customization: monday.com's boards are highly configurable with columns for status, timeline, numbers, formulas, and custom fields. Teams build their own views without code.
Dashboard reporting: Centralized dashboards pull data from multiple boards into a single view. Leadership can track portfolio-level metrics without switching between project workspaces.
Automation recipes: 200+ pre-built automation templates handle recurring tasks like status updates, notifications, and assignment changes. Custom automations are available for more complex triggers.
Limitations
The free plan supports only 2 seats, which limits evaluation for larger teams
Advanced features like time tracking and integrations require the Pro tier
Per-seat pricing can become expensive at enterprise scale compared to per-user models with included features
Pricing:
Free: $0 (up to 2 seats)
Basic: $9/seat/month (billed annually)
Standard: $12/seat/month (billed annually)
Pro: $19/seat/month (billed annually)
Enterprise: Contact sales
Source: monday.com pricing page
ClickUp
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What I keep hearing from teams evaluating ClickUp is the appeal of consolidation. It combines project management, docs, whiteboards, goals, and time tracking in a single workspace.
Best features
Unified workspace: Docs, whiteboards, chat, and project tracking live in the same platform. This reduces context switching for teams bouncing between Notion, Slack, and a PM tool.
Custom fields and views: ClickUp supports 15+ view types and highly flexible custom fields, allowing teams to tailor the workspace to their process rather than adapting to the tool.
ClickUp AI: AI features assist with task creation, writing, summarization, and action item extraction from comments and descriptions.
Limitations
The breadth of features can overwhelm teams during initial setup and onboarding
Performance can slow with large workspaces and complex view configurations
Enterprise-specific features like advanced permissions and SSO require the Business tier or higher
Pricing:
Free Forever: $0
Unlimited: $7/user/month (billed yearly)
Business: $12/user/month (billed yearly)
Enterprise: Contact sales
Source: ClickUp pricing page
Asana
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I've watched Asana evolve from a task management tool into a goal-driven work management platform. Its enterprise play centers on connecting individual tasks to organizational objectives.
Best features
Goals and portfolios: Asana's goals feature links team-level work to company objectives with progress tracking. Portfolios give leadership a real-time status view across multiple projects.
Workload management: The workload view shows team capacity based on task effort, helping managers redistribute work before burnout or missed deadlines.
Timeline and dependencies: Gantt-style timeline views with task dependencies make it straightforward to plan complex, multi-phase projects.
Limitations
The free plan is limited to 2 users, making it impractical for enterprise evaluation
Advanced features like goals, portfolios, and custom rules require the Advanced tier ($24.99/user/month)
Native time tracking is not included; teams need third-party integrations for billable hours
Pricing:
Personal: $0 (up to 2 users)
Starter: $10.99/user/month (billed annually)
Advanced: $24.99/user/month (billed annually)
Enterprise: Contact sales
Enterprise+: Contact sales
Source: Asana pricing page
Microsoft Project
Before I joined Teamwork.com, I saw teams default to Microsoft Project simply because it was already in their M365 license. It's the legacy enterprise standard, now rebranded under "Planner."
Best features
Microsoft 365 integration: Project data flows into Power BI, Teams, SharePoint, and Excel. For enterprises that standardize on Microsoft, this eliminates data silos between project work and business intelligence.
Resource leveling: Built-in resource leveling algorithms automatically resolve scheduling conflicts when resources are overallocated, a feature that dates back to the original desktop tool.
Gantt charts and scheduling: Microsoft Project's Gantt chart capabilities remain among the most detailed in the market, supporting complex dependencies, baselines, and critical path analysis.
Limitations
The user experience has improved but still carries legacy UI patterns that feel dated compared to modern tools
Full project management features require Planner and Project Plan 3 at $30/user/month, significantly higher than most competitors
Limited collaboration features for external stakeholders compared to tools with client portals
Pricing:
Planner (included in Microsoft 365): Included with Microsoft 365 subscription
Planner Plan 1: $10/user/month (paid yearly)
Planner and Project Plan 3: $30/user/month (paid yearly)
Note: Plan 5 reached end of sale on May 1, 2026.
Source: Microsoft Project pricing page
Celoxis
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I've seen Celoxis appear most often in evaluations where resource optimization is the top priority. It focuses on portfolio management for organizations running dozens of parallel projects.
Best features
Resource demand management: Capacity planning tools forecast resource needs across the portfolio, helping PMOs plan hiring or reallocation months ahead.
Custom dashboards: Configurable dashboards with pivot charts, KPIs, and drill-down capability for executive reporting.
Financial tracking: Built-in budget tracking at the project and portfolio level with revenue recognition and cost analysis features.
Limitations
The user interface looks less polished than competitors like monday.com or Asana
The platform has a steeper learning curve for non-technical users
The multiple user-type pricing model (Standard, Team-Member, Timesheet) can be confusing to evaluate
Pricing:
Core: $10/user/month (prepaid annually, Standard user)
Essentials: $25/user/month (prepaid annually, Standard user)
Professional: $35/user/month (prepaid annually, Standard user)
Business: $45/user/month (prepaid annually, Standard user)
Enterprise: Custom pricing
Note: Celoxis uses multiple user types (Standard, Team-Member, Timesheet) with different pricing per type. Prices shown are for Standard users.
Source: Celoxis pricing page
Adobe Workfront
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In my experience, Adobe Workfront shows up in enterprise shortlists when marketing ops is the buying center. It targets creative operations teams that manage campaigns, production, and approvals at scale.
Best features
Adobe Creative Cloud integration: Workfront connects directly to Photoshop, InDesign, and other Creative Cloud apps. Creatives access briefs and upload assets without leaving their tools.
Campaign management: Purpose-built workflows for marketing campaigns with request queues, approval routing, and deadline tracking.
Enterprise reporting: Detailed reporting on team throughput, project timelines, and resource utilization.
Limitations
Pricing is entirely hidden behind "contact sales," making it impossible to compare without engaging a salesperson
The platform is purpose-built for marketing and creative teams; teams outside those functions may find it overly specialized
Onboarding and configuration can be complex, often requiring Adobe professional services
Pricing:
Select: Contact sales
Prime: Contact sales
Ultimate: Contact sales
Adobe Workfront does not publish pricing publicly. All plans require contacting sales.
Source: Adobe Workfront pricing page
Jira
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I've noticed that when engineering drives the PM tool decision, Jira is almost always the frontrunner. Its enterprise features have expanded significantly.
Best features
Sprint planning and backlog management: Sprint boards, backlog grooming tools, and velocity tracking set the industry standard for agile teams.
Advanced roadmaps: Cross-team planning with dependency mapping across multiple projects and teams. Enterprise teams use this to align engineering work with business objectives.
Atlassian ecosystem: Jira connects natively with Confluence, Bitbucket, and Opsgenie, creating a full development lifecycle platform.
Limitations
Non-technical teams often find the interface unintuitive and overly focused on software development workflows
Configuration flexibility comes at the cost of complexity; Jira administration is a specialized skill
Teams running non-agile methodologies (waterfall, hybrid) have fewer built-in workflow options
Pricing:
Free: $0 (up to 10 users)
Standard: $7.91/user/month (billed annually)
Premium: $14.54/user/month (billed annually)
Enterprise: Contact sales
Source: Jira pricing page
AI workflow automation vs. traditional automation
Most enterprise PM tools now include some form of automation. The question is whether that automation is rule-based or AI-driven, because the difference matters at scale.
Traditional automation follows if-then logic: if a task status changes to "complete," then notify the project manager. These rules are useful for standardizing repetitive steps, but they break down when workflows involve judgment calls, exceptions, or pattern recognition.
AI-driven automation is different. It analyzes historical data to predict outcomes, recommend resource assignments, or flag at-risk projects before anyone raises a concern. For example, you can let AI find the right scheduling window. The AI Smart Scheduler in Teamwork.com uses project history and team availability to suggest optimal task timing.
Dimension
Rule-based automation covers defined processes. AI automation catches the patterns a good PM would spot intuitively. In my experience, the best enterprise tools offer both.
Why Teamwork.com stands out for enterprise project management
C-suite leaders evaluating enterprise PM software often ask the wrong question. It's not about which tool has the most features. It's about which tool grows revenue without growing headcount. That's the problem Teamwork.com was built to solve.
Our platform connects project delivery to financial performance in a way most competitors don't. Portfolio views show not just project status but project profitability. Resource management tools show not just who's busy but who's generating margin.
According to Gartner's 2024 CMO Spend Survey, marketing budgets fell to 7.7% of company revenue in 2024. When budgets tighten, visibility into which projects are profitable becomes a competitive advantage.
If you're running a professional services firm or agency, your platform needs to support client work end to end. See how Teamwork.com handles your specific workflows.
FAQs about enterprise project management software
Here are answers to the questions I hear most often from teams evaluating enterprise PM tools.
What is enterprise project management software?
Enterprise project management software is a platform built to plan, execute, and oversee projects across large organizations. It includes portfolio management, resource planning, financial tracking, and compliance features that standard PM apps don't provide.
How is enterprise PM software different from standard PM tools?
Standard PM tools handle task tracking and basic collaboration for small teams. Enterprise PM software adds portfolio visibility, resource capacity planning, financial governance, and role-based access controls. PMI's Pulse of the Profession consistently shows that mature PM practices reduce budget waste. The difference is scale and governance.
What features should enterprise PM software include?
At minimum, look for: portfolio management, resource capacity planning, budget tracking, customizable workflows, and role-based permissions. SSO, compliance certifications, and deep integrations are also important. AI-powered automation is an increasing differentiator. Forrester's project management research covers how these capabilities reshape enterprise selection criteria.
How much does enterprise PM software cost?
Pricing ranges from free tiers to $7 to $45 per user per month for paid plans. Most tools offer a lower-tier entry point ($7 to $12/user/month) and an enterprise plan requiring a sales conversation. See the comparison table above for a full breakdown.
Can enterprise PM tools support agile and waterfall?
Yes, most modern enterprise PM tools support both agile and waterfall methodologies, plus hybrid approaches. Jira is the strongest for pure agile workflows. Tools like Teamwork.com, Wrike, and Smartsheet support flexible methodology switching within the same platform. For more on agile PM tools, see our agile project management software guide.
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