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Complete Guide

Now / Next / Later Roadmap

The roadmap format that communicates priorities without over-committing to dates. How to build one, real examples, and why it works better than timelines for agile teams.

Features.Vote's roadmap uses this format natively — see all roadmap templates

The Three Columns

Now

Current sprint / this month

Confidence: High — committed, in progress

What you're actively building right now. These items have been prioritized, scoped, and assigned. The team is working on them. Max 3-5 items — if you have more, you're spreading too thin.

Rules

  • Max 3-5 items — forces ruthless prioritization
  • Each item has a clear owner and definition of done
  • Items should ship within the current sprint or month
  • Moving something to 'Now' is a commitment, not an aspiration

Example Items

CSV export for analytics dashboard

Onboarding flow redesign (Phase 1)

Slack integration — webhook notifications

Next

1-3 months out

Confidence: Medium — planned, not committed

What you're planning to build after the current sprint. These items are validated (users want them) and scoped enough to estimate, but not yet committed. They'll move to 'Now' when current work ships.

Rules

  • 5-10 items — more specificity than 'Later', less commitment than 'Now'
  • Items should be refined enough to estimate (not vague ideas)
  • Priority order matters — top items move to 'Now' first
  • Review and reorder monthly based on new data (votes, feedback, strategy)

Example Items

Dark mode support (47 votes)

Team permissions and roles

API v2 with webhook support

Later

3+ months out

Confidence: Low — directional, not committed

What you might build in the future. These are ideas validated by user demand (votes, requests) but not yet scoped or committed. 'Later' communicates direction without making promises. Items may move up, get merged, or be deprecated.

Rules

  • 10-20 items max — 'Later' is not a backlog dump
  • Items represent themes or capabilities, not specific implementations
  • Review quarterly — archive stale items, promote validated ones
  • Be honest: some 'Later' items will never happen, and that's okay

Example Items

Mobile app (23 votes, monitoring demand)

Advanced analytics with custom dashboards

White-label / multi-tenant support

Why Now/Next/Later Works

Forces prioritization

Max 3-5 items in 'Now' means you can't hide behind a 50-item 'in progress' list. If everything is priority, nothing is. Now/Next/Later makes the hard choices visible.

Honest with users

Timeline roadmaps imply promises: 'March 15.' Now/Next/Later says 'this is current priority.' When priorities shift, users understand — you changed direction, not broke a promise.

Data-driven movement

Items move from Later → Next → Now based on user votes, strategic alignment, and feasibility. A voting board naturally feeds this pipeline — top-voted items earn their way up.

Always current

Timeline roadmaps go stale when dates slip. Now/Next/Later is always accurate because it reflects current priorities, not past plans. Update it in 5 minutes during sprint planning.

Now/Next/Later vs. Timeline Roadmap

Date commitments

Now/Next/Later

No — communicates priority, not dates

Timeline

Yes — implies specific delivery dates

Flexibility

Now/Next/Later

High — reorder anytime without 'broken promises'

Timeline

Low — changing dates feels like missing deadlines

Communication

Now/Next/Later

"We're building X now, Y is next"

Timeline

"X will ship on March 15"

Audience

Now/Next/Later

Agile teams, customers, public roadmaps

Timeline

Executives, boards, contract-driven stakeholders

Over-commitment risk

Now/Next/Later

Low — 'Next' and 'Later' are explicitly not committed

Timeline

High — dates create expectations and pressure

Planning cadence

Now/Next/Later

Review monthly, adjust continuously

Timeline

Plan quarterly, update reluctantly

Best for

Now/Next/Later

Continuous delivery, SaaS, startups

Timeline

Fixed releases, enterprise, regulated industries

Need a timeline roadmap instead? See our 10 roadmap templates including timeline, kanban, and RICE-scored formats.

Real Examples

Basecamp

Uses a 'Hill Chart' variation of Now/Next/Later — work moves from 'figuring out' to 'making it happen.' No timeline, just progress visualization.

Lesson: You don't need dates to show progress. Direction + momentum is enough.

Linear

Roadmap shows projects with status (Planned, In Progress, Completed) without specific dates. Public roadmap uses the same format.

Lesson: The best engineering teams in the world don't commit to dates on their public roadmap — they commit to priorities.

Buffer

Public roadmap organized by 'Exploring', 'In Progress', 'Done'. Users vote on ideas. Most-voted items move from Exploring to In Progress.

Lesson: A public Now/Next/Later roadmap powered by user votes is the ultimate transparency play.

Ghost

Open-source CMS with a public roadmap showing 'Planned', 'In Progress', 'Shipped'. Community contributes to prioritization through GitHub discussions.

Lesson: Open-source products benefit enormously from transparent prioritization — the community self-selects what to contribute to.

How to Build Yours

1

List everything you're building right now

Look at your current sprint. What's actively in progress? These are your 'Now' items. If there are more than 5, you're over-committed — move excess to 'Next.'

2

Identify what's validated and coming next

Review your voting board, customer interviews, and strategic priorities. What has the most votes? What aligns with this quarter's goals? These are 'Next' — 5-10 items, ordered by priority.

3

Capture directional ideas in 'Later'

Everything else that's validated by demand but not yet scoped goes to 'Later.' This isn't a backlog dump — max 20 items that represent real future directions.

4

Make it public and add voting

Share the roadmap publicly. Add a voting board so users can influence what moves from Later → Next → Now. Features.Vote connects voting directly to roadmap status.

5

Review and update regularly

Now: every sprint. Next: monthly. Later: quarterly. When you ship from 'Now,' pull the top item from 'Next.' When new data (votes, strategy shifts) arrives, reorder.

"Was very easy and intuitive to get started and I was able to do it in a few minutes which was good."

Joe Bloxsome,

Founder at GoPasswordless

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