GitHub has great bug tracking feature. We used it for our last website redesign and found it very helpful and useful for communicating with many different people.
-Erik > On Jul 11, 2014, at 11:00 AM, "Shearer, Timothy J" <tshea...@email.unc.edu> > wrote: > > If you¹re looking for cheap and easy, trello can work. It¹s a > agile-inspired, free, nicely customizable tool to support workflows like > this. We¹ve had forms on our site (in our case a formidable form in > wordpress) write directly to it. > > Tim > >> On 7/11/14, 10:48 AM, "Andrew Shuping" <ashup...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Hey Elizabeth, >> >> I know my library's systems department uses The Trac project: >> http://trac.edgewall.org/, which lets them do exactly what you're asking >> about. I can't remember how easy/difficult the installation process is, >> but using it is easy for almost anyone. Our building maintenance person >> has even started using it as a way to track what she needs to do. >> >> Andrew Shuping >> >> Robert Frost - "In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about >> life: it goes on." >> >> >> On Fri, Jul 11, 2014 at 9:30 AM, Elizabeth Leonard < >> elizabeth.leon...@shu.edu> wrote: >> >>> Does anyone have a good way to track requests to make changes to your >>> website(s)? I would like to be able to put in requests and be able to >>> track >>> if they are done and when, so there's fewer emails flying about. >>> >>> E >>> >>> Elizabeth Leonard >>> Assistant Dean of Information Technologies, Resources Acquisition and >>> Description >>> Seton Hall University >>> 400 South Orange Avenue >>> South Orange, NJ 07079 >>> 973-761-9445 >>>