After some months of working with a Kanban board in Jira (6.4.7), the tool came up with the reports.
I think, I understand the concepts of Resolution Time (average number of days issues took to be resolved) and of Average Age ("average number of days that issues were unresolved for a given day over the past 90 days"). Yet, looking at the graphs, a number of questions pop up:
1) In the first graph: why is there not a bar on every day? Are bars maybe only shown on days that an issue was resolved? And is the lenght of the bar then the number of days it took *that* specific issue to be closed? But what average is then shown?
2) Do I understand correctly that the bars in the second graph shows a running average? If so, what happenend on, e.g., Feb 26, where the length of the bars decreases from 61 to 58? What does it require to decrease the average with 3 days? Have a lot of issues been resolved on that day in no time?
3) Is there a connection between the bars in the first graph and the growth/decline in the second? If so: what is that connection?
I love to use metrics to help the team draw conclusions on their performance, but with these questions, it is hard to know what conclusions can be drawn.
Hi @Arjen Uittenbogaard @Kiri 👋 and everybody who is looking for solution!
Resolution Time Report you can have only for tickets from Jira Service Management. For issues from Jira Software you need to use apps from Atlassian marketplace like Time Between Statuses(created by SaaSJet team). Add-on calculates Resolution Time, Average Age Reports and measures other KPIs based on these calculations.
You can also set up highlights of values that exceed the permissible level, and in this case, you can receive issue and email notifications.
We are offering you a 30 days of free trial, and you can also book a demo with our specialist.
I am confident that this app will be very useful for you, so don't hesitate to give it a try!
@Valeriia_Havrylenko_SaaSJet Now I am in the trial period and I am satisfied with the app.
Many thanks!
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.
Hello @Arjen Uittenbogaard ,
The Resolution Time Chart shows the average resolution time of issues in your filter that were resolved on any given day. In other words, each bar represents the average resolution time of only the issues resolved on that day. If no issues were resolved on a given day, then no bar.
The Average Age Report shows the average age of all non-resolved issues in the filter. Even when there is no action on issues, the bars will keep getting longer each day because the existing issues are aging. When you resolve one or more issues, the next day average may move up or down based on the age of those resolved issues.
These two reports are very high-level reports that provide summary data and do not allow you to drill down.
Our team at OBSS built Timepiece - Time in Status for Jira app for greater flexibility and details. It is available for Jira Server, Cloud and Data Center.
Time in Status allows you to see how much time each issue spent on each status or assigned to each assignee. You can also combine statuses into consolidated columns to see metrics like Ticket Age, Cycle Time or Lead Time.
You can calculate averages and sums of those durations grouped by issue fields you select. (For example see the total Resolution time per Epic, or average Ticket Age per issuetype, etc.).
Below are screenshots that show a custom Lead Time field that shows the total of ToDo and InProgress statuses. The same can be done for any status combination.
The app calculates its reports using already existing Jira issue histories so when you install the app, you don't need to add anything to your issue workflows and you can get reports on your past issues as well.
The app has Custom calendar support that your are looking for. This feature enables you to get your reports based on a 24/7 calendar or your custom business calendar. (This one is important because a 24/7 calendar in most cases shows misleading data. For example an issue created at 16:00 on Friday and was resolved at 09:00 on next Monday seems to stay open for 2,5 days but in terms of business hours, it is only a few hours. You can see this using Time in Status by OBSS.)
Finally, the app has History Trim feature. This feature allows you to report on a subsection of issue histories instead of the whole history. Very useful when you want to focus on changes made during sprint or project phase.
Using Time in Status you can:
Timepiece - Time in Status for Jira
EmreT
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.
Hello @Kiri ,
I suggest you read my article on metrics. It is a 5 minute read. In this article I also offer you a way to measure resolution time in Jira Cloud.
I hope you benefit from the article.
Revealing Operational Excellence: Identifying Bottlenecks through Metrics like Cycle Time, Lead Time
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.
Online forums and learning are now in one easy-to-use experience.
By continuing, you accept the updated Community Terms of Use and acknowledge the Privacy Policy. Your public name, photo, and achievements may be publicly visible and available in search engines.
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.