Confluence best practices information architecture

Robert Obuch July 23, 2014

I've noticed Atlassian use spaces to isolate individual product versions and it appears to work really well.

We have recently implemented JIRA and Confluence (both OnDemand) and are looking to fully utilize it's functionality properly and correctly. I'm aware a lot of this is open to interpretation but I'm looking for opinions, experiences and best practices.

We operate a single ecommerce website and use agile methodologies so we mostly don't know what we're going to develop and release or when. Our Confluence is configured with 3 spaces, Development, Testing and Operations - very different from how Atlassian have implemented it with versions.

  • Development is currently used for specifying product requirements, documenting pre release checklists and actions and documenting general development processes.
  • Testing is currently used for documenting test plans and cases for releases and general testing processes.
  • Operations is used for infrastructure's use but in this example probably irrelevant.

Concerns are raised around the noise in Confluence in the future. What strategies could be used to maintain the space? Archiving is an obvious choice but seems like a mundane manual process. Our current setup obviously isolates the teams and reduces collaboration.

If we implement Confluence in a way such as Atlassian have, we have the benefit of the teams operating in the same space and collaborating more effectively but if we create a space each time, we have to create the 'space skeleton' every time which is also a manual process. Also if we don't know what will be developed and released in a version, it will be difficult to specify requirements using Confluence.

Does anybody have experience dealing with these sort of issues and have any advice on how to handle the situation and how do you manage your information architecture on Confluence and what problems do you face?

4 answers

2 votes
Mick Davidson
Rising Star
Rising Star
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 Leaders.
July 24, 2014

Robert,

You can create a space that is marked as Archive, and put all the old but keepable info there.You can use Tools/Remove to delete pages you don't want.

When you use the Archive functionality on a space, the space is not automatically added to the global search, so the redundant info doesn't appear in search results. If you run a global search there is an option in the results to add the archived space to the search.

To set a space to Archive, go to Browse/Space Admin then select the drop down menu by the Status field (under Edit Space Details) and select Archive.

Does that go anyway to resolving your problem?

Cheers.

0 votes
Maggie Modersohn
Rising Star
Rising Star
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 Leaders.
November 20, 2014

Hi @Robert Obuch If you're looking for Best Practices, have a look at this webinar around setting up a sound information architecture in Confluence. It's scheduled for December 9th and you can read more about it here: http://bit.ly/11udV5U

0 votes
Robert Obuch July 24, 2014

Noise being the amount of redundant pages we would eventually have for releases and old/legacy work. I'm looking for strategies to manage this information when it becomes no longer relevant.

0 votes
Elisa [Atlassian]
Atlassian Team
Atlassian Team members are employees working across the company in a wide variety of roles.
July 24, 2014

Hi Robert,

Normally, it is created a space for each project. However, it can be customized. You can organize Confluence the best way for you to use.

What did you mean by "Concerns are raised around the noise in Confluence in the future"?

Best regards!

Suggest an answer

Log in or Sign up to answer
TAGS
AUG Leaders

Atlassian Community Events