Salesforce CRM is commonly used by sales and support teams to manage accounts, opportunities, and customer cases. Atlassian Jira is used by engineering teams to plan development work, track bugs, and manage product backlogs.
Because these systems serve different teams, information often moves between them manually. Support teams may recreate customer issues in Jira, while engineering teams send updates back through messages or email.
Over time, this process becomes difficult to maintain. Records fall out of sync, and it becomes harder to trace how a customer issue moves from support to development and eventually to resolution.
CRM systems and engineering tools are designed for different workflows. Integrating them requires translating customer records into development work items while preserving the context needed by both teams.
This article outlines a few considerations before implementing a Salesforce–Jira integration and walks you through an example of configuring synchronization between the two platforms using OpsHub.
Organizations typically connect Salesforce and Jira bidirectionally to improve coordination between customer-facing teams and engineering teams.
Before connecting the systems, it helps to review a few architectural considerations:
To illustrate the configuration process, the steps below use OpsHub Integration Manager (OIM), an integration platform listed on the Atlassian marketplace that supports bidirectional integrations between systems such as Salesforce and Jira.
A few prerequisites to consider before we proceed on with the integration:
Step 1: Configure Jira system
Once you log in, navigate to Configure Systems by clicking the plus sign at the top-right corner of the screen.
Step 2: Configure the Salesforce system and fill in the details as shown below:
Step 3: Mapping the entities
Configuring the mapping after the systems are configured: Drag and drop the systems in the Configure System screen, to initiate the mapping. After you put the system, click ’Proceed to Mapping’.
Step 4: Integration creation
Once your mapping created, it would look like below, click the integrate button to proceed.
Now, you can click the ‘Save’ button to save your integration.
Step 5: Activating the integration
After saving the configuration, activate the integration using Activate All option as seen below. Records will begin synchronizing between Salesforce and Jira according to the defined mappings.
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Real-world example: What cross-team sync looks like in practice
Customer issues logged in Salesforce don’t seamlessly flow into Jira, forcing teams to manually transfer data and increasing the risk of delays and errors.
This disconnect leads to poor visibility, misaligned teams, and slower resolution of customer issues.
A well-structured bidirectional Salesforce and Atlassian Jira integration ridges that gap. Here’s how:
Closing thoughts
Salesforce and Jira serve different roles in the product delivery process, but the work managed in each system is often connected.
A well-designed integration helps maintain visibility between customer operations and engineering teams while reducing manual coordination.
In practice, successful integrations usually focus on clear data ownership, careful field mapping, and selective synchronization rather than attempting to synchronize every available attribute.
Dr_ Ankita Mehta-OpsHub_ Inc
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