Hey everyone! My name is Sarah Schuster, and I'm a Customer Success Manager in Atlassian specializing in Jira Software Cloud. Over the next few weeks I will be posting discussion topics to get your expert advice to help new or first-time Jira Software Admins be successful.
So discussion topic #1: What would be your advice for first-time Jira Software admins? Tips? Tricks? Avoid doing that one thing everyone seems to always do? Let us know below!
Nice to meet you all!
Sarah
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My advice is to properly read the Jira documentation as it has a lot of things useful to start with the right approach.
In the list of favourites:
Hope it helps
Claudio
My advice:
1. Read Rachel's book
2. Start with the stuff that comes out of the box from Atlassian, but don't be afraid to change it to meet your teams' needs.
3. Limit administrators. Too many cooks spoil the broth. This has to be carefully vetted, controlled and reviewed or you will end up with a swampy mess.
4. Avoid bending to pressure from teams for a million custom fields, workflows, projects, statuses, issue types. Negotiate all those.
5. Resist the urge to buy every shiny, new add-on for Jira. Research, try them out, and seek advice on which ones to purchase.
6. If Server, purchase Jira workflow toolbox, jira suite utilities, jira misc workflow extensions. Your life will be much easier.
7. Attend Atlassian User Groups and be a frequent Community visitor.
Hope that helps...
Susan
The very first thing you should do is create a "Jira support" project (or heck, Service Desk). Ensure ALL users can create issues in it and see everything.
Have at least issue types for
You probably want to have more types - "user access" type ones can be really helpful, especially if you're only using internal directories, and it can be worth splitting up the "config" ones. Then there's the other-atlassain-tools stuff (keep it in the admins project, it's going to be related). And. And... and...
There's lots more stuff we could talk about in a "Supporting Jira" project, but the summary really is "Have an open Jira/Atlassian support Project", closely followed by "make no change to your Atlassian systems without a Jira request/issue to record it"
Simple and Small. Don't try to build everything in a day, but rather, explore the aspects and build on them as you develop.
1. Build a test project. Build it around something you already know, like baking a cake or writing a letter. You already know the process, but you'll learn how JIRA can enable the team to accomplish the process.
2. Check the forums and engage in the community. Lots of people have already tackled jobs similar and their ready to help you avoid headaches.
+1 for reading Rachel's book!
+1 for attending the community events, either in person or online! :)
Great advice, @Claudio Ombrella! Thank you for your post!
Thanks for your feedback, @Susan Hauth _Jira Queen_! So true to your points around organization culture and process changes. I felt the pain of that in past positions!
We are huge fans of Rachel's book here at Atlassian. In fact, I have a copy on my desk at the moment :)
Thanks again!
Great thoughts! Thanks @Nic Brough (Adaptavist)
Creating a test project is a really smart idea! In addition to your and others' previous points, it also alleviates any anxiety of "messing something up" in Jira for everyone else!
I wish I knew of Online Communities when I was an admin! I could have avoided a few mistakes and felt the community support & love! :)
Thanks again, @BillyP
Very true! Thanks @Sebastian Kleinholz
A few of my tips would be:
1. Make sure EVERY workflow you create is setting the resolution; whether that's through a screen that pops- up with the resolution field when closing an issue, or it's being automatically set in a post function
2. Learn how to re- use custom fields by creating new contexts ***learned this one very late in the game
3. Don't create new issue types often, be very strict on this (or you will end up with so many issue types its ridiculous)
4. Take the time to demo and train new groups. If you let new groups off on their own with no Jira experience, they will never take upon themselves to learn the software
5. Have some space to post tips/ tricks, upgrade schedules, outages, etc. Supporting Jira becomes a lot more fun (and less stressful) when you have an engaged user community.
@Claire Upham I love these tips -- completely agree with #4 as a general life rule.
I'm curious about #2, how do you re-use custom fields? (Not a Jira admin myself so maybe it's obvious, but would love an example.)
Hey @Monique vdB
So I was talking about this:
Basically, it lets you re- use a select list custom field by creating new contexts for projects so the projects only see the values configured to the project. It's pretty nifty.
And it's really not that obvious! I didn't learn it until I took a training at a Summit a couple of years ago.
If you want more on point 2, here are two horror stories about custom fields:
1) The far too common one:
Like many of us, I inherited a Jira system and was told "it's complex, it's slow, it's confusing, we're hiring you to help fix it". There were 40 pairs of "Start date" and "End date" variations.
Apart from looking messy, this completely stuffs your reporting. You can't run anything like "show me issues that start in June", you have to run "show me issues that start-1 in June for projects A, C or Q, plus issues that start-2 in June for projects E, Z or H..." You can see where this Does. Not. Work.
Always, always, always re-use existing fields.
2) The current one.
Status is a system "field". People mistakenly think they need more than one, so they create fields like "test status", "qa status", "review status". These are informationally poor because they're not truly status.
But the main problem is that you can't find them, and I'm afraid Atlassian's UI designers have made it worse recently. Add 50 variations of status to Jira. Go to the issue navigator and run any search. Now say you want to see "qa status" in the results. You click "add column" and type in "status". Only the first 20 of your status are shown and there is absolutely no way to get to the other 30 (and the real status is often hidden in the 30)
This applies for any fields with similar names. The correct fix for it is "reuse fields" (and, especially, stop misrepresenting status with fields that are not really status)
The pain you described in number 2 could not be more real. We have a custom field called "Type" that's used by around 20 projects. Whenever a user wants to add Type as column in the issue navigator, I *quickly* change the name of the custom field to "A Type" so it comes up first, have the user add it as a column, then I *even more quickly" change the custom field name back to "Type". Luckily I have done this several times without any one screaming. So, guess that's the best we can do for now.
In my opinion, statuses and custom fields are the easiest items to grow out of control. Regulation in the beginning can help tremendously.
Woot woot! Welcome to the party! :)
Really agree with all those 6 points.
Many good tips for Jira Administrators have already been posted here and don't want to repeat variations of those tips.
Instead, I will focus on giving some tips to Jira Software admins about features that were not available to Jira Core admins, or that despite of being Core stuff it would be advisable to have into account in regard to its relationship with a JSW feature.
There we have some tips I can think of for the moment:
Oh my I just inherited a JIRA system with so many custom fields, and was just thinking how can I clean up or maybe even combine the duplicates. #2 will probably help me in my clean-up. Great tip not only for new JIRA admins but experienced ones as well, its a great reminder.
I second this! Always a great idea to have a JIRA Support project.
Are you suggesting this many issue types so that you can control intake fields? We typically use Component or something like that to categorize the requests.
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