Book Image

Jira Work Management for Business Teams

By : John Funk
Book Image

Jira Work Management for Business Teams

By: John Funk

Overview of this book

Jira Work Management (JWM) is the newest project management tool from Atlassian, replacing Atlassian's previous product, Jira Core Cloud. While Jira Software focuses on development groups, JWM is specifically targeted toward business teams in your organization, such as human resources, accounting, legal, and marketing, enabling these functional groups to manage and enhance their work, as well as stay connected with their company's developers and other technical groups. This book helps you to explore Jira project templates and work creation and guides you in modifying a board, workflow, and associated schemes. Jira Work Management for Business Teams takes a hands-on approach to JWM implementation and associated processes that will help you get up and running with Jira and make you productive in no time. As you explore the toolset, you'll find out how to create reports, forms, and dashboards. The book also shows you how to manage screens, field layouts, and administer your JWM projects effectively. Finally, you'll get to grips with the basics of creating automation rules and the most popular use cases. By the end of this Jira book, you'll be able to build and manage your own Jira Work Management projects and make basic project-related adjustments to achieve optimal productivity.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Section 1: Jira Work Management Basics
5
Section 2: Enhancing Your JWM Project
10
Section 3: Administering Jira Work Management Projects

Summary

In this chapter, we have learned how site administrators can invite new users to your Jira organization and how project administrators can add users to a project and associate them with roles to grant them permissions to the project. We also learned about the permission scheme and how it relates to project roles, groups, and users.

Then, we delved into additional security capabilities using issue-level security as a layer on top of the permission scheme. And, finally, we learned some of the different functions that Jira administrators and project administrators can perform and what is unique to each role.

In the next chapter, we will learn how to migrate existing Jira projects to JWM projects, use shared schemes, and work with external functions.