Just to add my support for Frans message @Kevin Bui
We also have invested heavily in single project automation at the encouragement of Atlassian over the past few years and now rely on these automation's for several business critical processes. During times these difficult times of inflation it will not be possible to upgrade to a higher tier and so we now have to look at alternatives for these automation's.
I have been promoting Jira to my organisation and have managed to reach the point where are about to look at adopting other Atlassian products into our business. A sudden move like this will shatter my companies confidence in the platform and it will be difficult to promote going forward
We are now having to look at integrations and assess those too as again. For example there is no path where we can consider integrations with github and bitbucket (which have been heavily promoted) but rely on automations for push/pull requests.
Please re-consider this decision as the implications become clearer.
Automation has such a big impact to our daily business. These are very sad news. Our single project execution rules are essential and with the coming limit it is a tremendous hit in the face. Big dislike and thumbs down.
@Szabó DávidThat's how it is for now. But they are changing this. "In today’s model, an automation rule that is configured to run in a single Jira project does not count toward the usage limit. In the new model, all automation rule types (i.e. single project, project type, multi-project, and global rules) will count towards the usage limit."
Hi, in the 'Usage' tab, could the 'Executions' column be updated to only represent the number of automation executions that were successful and in turn counted towards the limit.
This is a very bad move from Atlassian, considering that most of our rules are for single projects. The reason we choose Jira (over better competitors!) a few years ago was the ability to use automations without worrying too much. Needless to say, the trust from our company toward the Jira ecosystemmay be shattered. Now we may need to search around and rewrite a lot of stuff for whatever platform we'll start to use next. Sorry, but this is not something like a Netflix subscriptions, where you can delete the account and be happy. This is a real life impact that could lead us to a lot of crunch.
Atlassian, please reconsider, at least for existing customers.
This is really a train wreck of a decision. We share our instance among three divisions and all have been heavily invested in automation. In fact we have changed several of our processes to improve efficiency precisely because we had unlimited single project automations. This is going to blow up years of work we have all done in our respective groups.
We're talking hours upon hours of discussions, plannings and execution to put this automations in place.
Looking at our usage report, I looked at the last month of our usage and managed to calculate on my own(since you decided to hold off an extra two weeks to provide a tool that will demonstrate how horrible this will be) how many successful executions we had, and we used 8900 executions. Do you really think we'll be able to clean these up enough to get under 1700? And even if we sneak under that threshold, that basically means we can no longer create any more. Hell, as someone else even mentioned, we can't event test out anymore cause successful tests will start going towards that count too.
I really hope you back off of this plan and go back to how things used to be.
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@Fran I agree with you we have invested time and effort in project level automation. Most of which make up for expected functionality that just is not there in the cloud version. Now we are just being pumped for more cash, Project level automation should be part of the standard package end off.
I will echo the other comments here - we have leaned heavily on single project automations to fill in gaps in functionality that are not provided in workflows and transitions. Automations are powerful but also easy to understand, which is great when you have a team of various skill levels.
With this change, we will likely have to shift to doing more with scripting add-ons, which are powerful but much less easy to understand, troubleshoot and monitor.
This sudden change wouldn't sting as much if screens and transitions were modernized to allow for more dynamic input and logic. Automations and the smart values within are also the only way to integrate Assets and Asset data into a workflow. Building out anything complicated in Jira will often need to rely on Automations and to hamstring it this way really limits what we can and want to implement for our company.
Dropping such a fundamental change/limitation on us with less than 2 months notice is just rubbing salt into the wound.
Edited to add that the recent outages in Automations (not all Atlassian's fault, I know) caused absolute havoc in our instance, as we found out how crucial Automations have become to our flows working properly. It highlighted how integral Automations have become and how much work it will take to unwind/limit/restrict their usage.
What a bad decision by Atlassian to do this to it's customers! It's bad enough that they're now going to cap project automations that were once free, but they're doing little to help admins actually manage usage. How about some permissions to restrict access to automations outright or per-user settings that admin could set? Admins now also have 30 days to audit and rework their automations? Admins don't have enough time and doing these things just makes things that much more difficult.
This is nothing more than an attempt by Atlassian to drive more customers to the Premium & Enterprise tiers.
I'm not sure I understand the purpose of giving 1,000 per user. Does this just mean that the automation bot gets a total of number of users we're paying for x1000 for executions per month?
I'm also a bit confused by the wording- in the future if I have a 100 Jira Cloud Standard licences does that mean I can have up to 170,000 executions within one month (100 * 1,700)?
Is that principal the same for all products as it is not clear.
Using analytics, Atlassian was able to see that companies were using single-project automation to by-pass the multi-project limitation and they took action to force people to scale to premium
This is a sad decision to try to upsell people into a product they don't need
Should provide a way to have more run instead, the invoice should be less expensive
Unfortunately, going forward people are going to be less inclined to experiment with automation because while failed rules won't count against us, successful ones will.
Before we could setup test projects and experiment with different rules, triggers and steps within the rule to work on efficiency. Now trying to do any of this works against our usage.
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@Pier-Luc Boucher not to mention that these restrictions are absurd the way they are right now. Every day, Atlassian seems to be pushing it's customers further and further away. 🤷‍♂️
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