

Joan’s team has been using Jira for several years and find it’s a good way for them to track individual tasks and/or bugs they’ve been assigned to work on. However, most of the team makes their updates in Jira, not Workfront. In addition, this information is feeding into an executive report that’s reviewed every quarter. It gives the team a nice visual representation of what’s going on.

Joan Harris, the Dev-Jedi Council Agile team lead, uses the scrum board and burndown chart as a way to measure the progress of the overall sprint. Here we have a sprint in Workfront titled “Workfront Story Spring.” Yet with the Jira native integration, that kind of information can automatically transfer between the two applications. This means teams double their efforts by creating tasks both in Workfront and Jira. Many teams use Jira to track task-level progress, but they also use Workfront to manage projects. Jira is a product created by Atlassian to track projects and issues for development and technical support teams. With the Jira native integration, this information can automatically transfer between the two applications. While many teams use Jira to track task level progress, they use Workfront to do true project management because they can get a high-level progress view. Jira is a product used to track projects and issues for development and technical support teams. Create visibility with the Jira Integration
