<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:rsb="http://www.rssbus.com/ns?RsbOps/v2/" xmlns:ls="http://www.microsoft.com/schemas/rss/core/2005" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:x="http://www.rssbus.com/ns?RsbOps/v2/anonymous/"  xmlns:data="http://www.rssbus.com/ns?RsbOps/v2/anonymous/">
	<channel>
	  <ls:treatAs>list</ls:treatAs>
	  <ls:listinfo></ls:listinfo>
	  <info xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" title="PM Engine News"></info>
		<copyright>Copyright 2026, PM Engine, Inc.</copyright>
		<description></description>
		<link>https://www.pmengine.com/</link>
		<title>PM Engine News</title>
		<webMaster>webmaster@pmengine.com</webMaster>
		


  <item>
    <description>Compare pricing tiers and feature limits for PM Engine, the self-hosted project management solution.</description>
    <title>Explore the PM Engine Demo Site</title>
    <x:link>/kb/articles/pmengine-demo-site-content</x:link>
    <x:published>True</x:published>
  </item>
  <item>
    <description>A guide to exposing your self-hosted PM Engine instance to remote teams using ngrok or Cloudflare Tunnels</description>
    <title>Enable Secure Remote Access to PM Engine</title>
    <x:link>/kb/articles/enabling-remote-access-to-pm-engine</x:link>
    <x:published>True</x:published>
  </item>
  <item>
    <description>PM Engine is built around three core elements that actually matter: cards, projects, and boards. Here&#x27;s how they work together to help teams plan, track, and deliver work without the overhead.</description>
    <title>Concepts: Cards, Projects, and Boards</title>
    <x:link>/kb/articles/Concepts-in-pm-engine</x:link>
    <x:published>True</x:published>
  </item>
  <item>
    <description>Different projects need different ways to categorize work. PM Engine uses tags. Tags are simple labels you create when you need them. Here&#x27;s how tags handle everything from priority to impact without configuration overhead.</description>
    <title>Custom attributes without the configuration overhead</title>
    <x:link>/kb/articles/Custom-attributes-with-tags</x:link>
    <x:published>True</x:published>
  </item>
  <item>
    <description>We talk about project tools in terms of features&#x2014;timelines, dashboards, automations. But what drives adoption is something more visceral: the desire for clarity, control, and relief from the chaos of unstructured work. This article identifies the 12 most common outcomes teams are really chasing when they adopt a PM tool.</description>
    <title>12 reasons we turn to project management tools</title>
    <x:link>/kb/articles/12-reasons-we-turn-to-project-management-tools</x:link>
    <x:published>True</x:published>
  </item>
  <item>
    <description>With hundreds of project management tools on the market, choosing one can feel impossible. Most teams compare features &#x2014; and end up with a tool that doesn&#x2019;t fit how they actually work. This post is the first in a series on how to choose smarter. It&#x27;s not by picking the &#x201C;best&#x201D; tool, but by thinking differently from the start.</description>
    <title>Choosing the right project management tool: start with impacts, not features</title>
    <x:link>/kb/articles/Choosing-the-right-project-management-tool-start-with-impacts-not-features</x:link>
    <x:published>True</x:published>
  </item>
  <item>
    <description>Most modern project management tools are SaaS, but we made a different choice: self-hosting.In this post, we&#x2019;ll explain why &#x2014; and how that decision benefits the teams who use it.</description>
    <title>Why we chose self-hosting in a SaaS world (and why you might too)</title>
    <x:link>/kb/articles/why-pmengine-is-self-hosted</x:link>
    <x:published>True</x:published>
  </item>

	</channel>
</rss>