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Limitations as an Admin

Kevin Gérard
Rising Star
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Rising Stars are recognized for providing high-quality answers to other users. Rising Stars receive a certificate of achievement and are on the path to becoming Community Champions.
February 6, 2026

Hi everyone... 

Here's some food for thought for the weekend. 
Let's create the scenario first. 

I am the Atlassian Admin for my company. I've got some people backing me up, but i'm usually the main point of contact for our group. 

This means you're often receiving questions, new challanges. But i feel i'm always tackling these in the same way, reusing previous work, or not quite finding the right answers that both work for them, and don't interfere with pre-existing setups. 

In the long run, it feels like i'm being blocked by my own knowledge of the platform. 
My Imagination fails as i'm immediatly translating ideas into schemes, custom fields & automation rules. 

in meantime we hear about all these big and wonderfull companies that use Atlassian to their benefit. There's so much to learn from how they organize their spaces. How have they tackled growth and international distribution? 

How have they tackled challange X or question Y. 

Because i feel that for 80% most of us atlassian admins get the same questions from our user base. 


Maybe what would be nice to break this chain is to host some inspiration sessions... 
Bigger companies that are willing to show their environments, to show how they've tackled  certain challenges. so we can get some fresh, new perspectives, and build some contacts too! 

6 comments

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Sergio Daniel Techeyra
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February 6, 2026

As an engineering student, I understand that feeling of being stuck when you get used to your own solutions. Breaking that inertia by seeing how others structure their systems (whether Atlassian schematics or circuits) is key to stopping repetition and starting to innovate. The inspiration sessions are a great initiative!

Like Susan Waldrip likes this
joao zampa
February 6, 2026

Hi Kevin,

I’d be happy to share some thoughts on this.

While I obviously can’t show company-specific data, I do think there’s a lot of value in learning from each other’s real challenges and approaches. What might work well is a bi-weekly session where Atlassian admins can bring concrete problems, and we collectively brainstorm solutions—looking at patterns, trade-offs, and alternative ways of thinking rather than just configurations.

It could be a great way to step outside our own habits, challenge assumptions, and see how others tackle similar questions around growth, scale, and complexity.

Curious to hear your thoughts on this. If it resonates, let’s connect and get something small started, see how it goes, and open it up to others from there.

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Anne Saunders
Rising Star
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Rising Stars are recognized for providing high-quality answers to other users. Rising Stars receive a certificate of achievement and are on the path to becoming Community Champions.
February 6, 2026

What you're looking for is almost how I use the Atlassian Community most of the time - and I feel the same. Many times, I've told someone at my company not to get their hopes up for a thing they're asking for because of how X or Y or Z works.

About half of those times, I have poked around the community's past posts and questions, and realized I never even thought of A as a way to solve what they wanted, or I can use a workflow transition instead of an automation, or that I didn't need a marketplace app to get some kind of report...and then I get to go back and delight my users.

You would think I'd be used to it by now, but the variety of ingenious uses of the platforms never fails to amaze.

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Devlend Maul
Contributor
February 6, 2026

Managing a Atlassian ecosystem is no small undertaking, especially when you’re balancing multiple sites and thousands of users. I won’t lie, it requires a massive breadth of knowledge ranging from the PM, SDLC and ITIL methodologies to technical scripting and being the go-to expert for every existing and new feature.

As our ecosystem has grown in both size and scope, our team hasn't always grown with it. I’ve found these 4 strategies were essential for staying ahead of the curve while keeping things manageable.

Scalable Governance

Standardize wherever you can. By using shared schemes and consistent field usage, you reduce technical debt. It’s also vital to establish guardrails, clear policies on how users request new spaces, configuration changes, or elevated permissions. This ensures the system grows by design rather than by accident.

User Knowledge Portal

Build a dedicated Confluence space to foster a self-serve culture. Include practical "how-to" guides, your internal policies, and even known "quirks" or limitations of the tools. Tools like Rovo are great aids to help users find answers themselves before reaching out for support.

Admin Automation

Invest time early on to save time later on. Focus on developing automation rules, Rovo agents, and scripts to handle routine or time-intensive tasks. We tend to build for our users but we are users ourselves. Even small automations can add up to dozens of hours saved over time which you can apply to other areas of your role.

Continuous Learning

The Atlassian landscape is wide, deep, and moves too fast to keep everything in your head. We focus on the immediate skills we need today, but stay connected to communities like this one to see what’s coming. I find it helpful to keep a personal Confluence space to save interesting articles, videos, solutions, and technical documentation, so they’re ready when I actually need to revisit and potentially implement them.

I know these are high level concepts but they have served us well over the years.

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Shawn Stevens
Contributor
February 6, 2026

I love it and agree with the discussion and comments. What I would also love to see is how these larger companies tackled various problems, out of the box vs buying another app scenario. 

Where was it necessary to leverage an Add on, since Out of the Box solutions weren't available or didn't work. 

From my own experience, part of the issues i see is culture. I feel that external process and procedures have limited the ability to come up with reasonable solutions or restriction on "can't afford another app" comments. 


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Robin Surland
Contributor
February 6, 2026

"Can't afford another app" is a real problem because of the way pricing works, however, I think the bigger blocker may be not having a Jira developer on our team. Everything mentioned above that we do takes time, lots of time and it doesn't leave any time to focus on actual development. I think that job needs to be separate from Jira administration because that alone is a full time job. 

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Shawn Stevens
Contributor
February 6, 2026

I think folks assume as the Jira Administrator, you are also the Admin and Developer and Architect. I have struggled with same issue(s). Would love to really dig into some development to make things easier or automated, but can't. 

joao zampa
February 6, 2026

Just wanted to put this out there: if you’re ever struggling with a complex implementation and want to brainstorm, feel free to ping me. I’m happy to jump on a call and help work through it. My schedule is a bit tight, but I’d love to find a time that works for us both. Reach me at: pragmatechy@gmail.com

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