Forums

Articles
Create
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

📝 Jira: Heads or Tails?

Amina CHAYEB
April 27, 2026

 When I first used Jira… I thought I was using it wrong

When I started working with Jira in 2014, on Jira Server 6, I believed I was learning a tool designed for software teams.

That’s what Jira was supposed to be.

But my very first implementation told a completely different story.

My first Jira project wasn’t for developers

In 2014, I implemented my very first process on Jira.

It wasn’t a software project.

It was a leave request workflow.

And here’s the interesting part:

      That process is still running today.
      More than 10 years later.
      With almost no major changes.

 A simple workflow… that worked for years

The process was straightforward:

  • An employee creates a leave request (issue type: Leave Request)
  • They provide:
    • start date
    • end date
    • address during leave
    • optional description
  • The request is assigned to the manager
  • The manager approves or rejects it
    • If rejected → a reason is mandatory
  • If approved:
    • a leave document is generated and attached
    • the employee receives it
  • Before the leave starts:
    • the employee can modify the dates
    • via a sub-workflow with validation

What struck me back then was this:

      Jira was not just tracking work.

      It was structuring a real-life business process.

      And it worked.

      For years.

That’s when I realized: Jira has two faces

Over time, I started seeing Jira differently.

Jira is like a coin:

  • Heads → Dev Tool
  • Tails → Workflow Engine

And most organizations… only use one side.

 Heads: Jira as a Dev Tool

On one side, Jira became the backbone of software delivery.

Integrated with tools like:

  • Git
  • Jenkins
  • test management tools like TestRail
  • design tools like Figma

It enables a fully connected workflow:

  • design → development → testing → deployment

 Everything is centralized in Jira.

 Everything is traceable.

 Everything is aligned.

 A real Dev workflow

In one of my projects, Jira was connected to:

  • Figma (design)
  • Git (code)
  • Jenkins (CI/CD)
  • TestRail (QA)

This allowed us to:

  • automate the dev-to-QA loop
  • centralize information
  • reduce friction between teams

 Jira here is a delivery engine.

 Tails: Jira as a Workflow Engine

But the other side is just as powerful.

Jira can model almost any business process.

Let me give you another real example.

 Insurance use case: claims management

In an insurance context, we implemented a claims declaration process using Jira.

Here’s how it worked:

  • A claim is created in Jira
  • A repair service is automatically assigned
  • The client is contacted to schedule an appointment
  • Once the repair is completed:
    • the billing process is triggered

 Same tool.

Completely different purpose.

Jira becomes:

  • a coordination engine
  • a decision workflow
  • a business process orchestrator

 The reality I’ve observed

Across many organizations, I’ve noticed a recurring pattern:

    Jira is used either as a Dev tool
    or as a workflow tool

But rarely both.

The consequence?

  • IT teams work in Jira
  • Business teams use other tools

Or the opposite.

Jira is deployed…
but not fully adopted.

 Jira didn’t change overnight — it evolved

Over the years, Jira expanded:

  • from Dev tool
  • to extensible platform
  • to collaboration hub
  • to service management solution

With Jira Service Management, the workflow side became official.

 And now… a third dimension

Today, we are entering a new phase:

   Collaboration + Intelligence

With tools like:

  • Confluence
  • Jira Service Management
  • Rovo

Jira is no longer just tracking work.

 It is helping us understand work.

 From coin to platform

For years, Jira was a coin:

  • Dev Tool
  • Workflow Engine

Today, it’s something else.

 A work platform

A platform that connects:

  • people
  • processes
  • knowledge
  • intelligence

 Final question

So here’s the real question:

How do YOU use Jira in your organization?

  • Only for development?
  • Only for workflows?
  • Or both?

 I’d love to hear your experience:

Have you ever used Jira beyond development?
What worked… and what didn’t?

0 comments

Comment

Log in or Sign up to comment
TAGS
AUG Leaders

Atlassian Community Events