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· 20 min read

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A lot of Jira roadmaps look fine in the screenshot and fail the moment a real team starts using them.

You’ve probably seen the pattern. Product has a timeline. Engineering has a board. Leadership wants a date. Delivery drifts, dependencies appear late, and the roadmap slowly turns into a polite fiction that everyone stops trusting. It still gets shown in meetings, but nobody uses it to make decisions.

That usually isn’t because Jira can’t do roadmaps. It can. The problem is choosing the wrong level of roadmap, stuffing too much detail into it, or treating it like a one-off planning artefact instead of a working communication tool.

A useful roadmap in Jira has to do three things at once. It has to show direction, hold enough structure to survive weekly change, and stay close to how teams deliver work. If one of those is missing, the roadmap becomes decoration.

I’ve seen simple project roadmaps work well for one squad shipping inside a narrow scope. I’ve also seen them collapse as soon as three teams, shared services, and external deadlines got involved. That’s usually the point where teams realise Jira’s built-in options are related, but not interchangeable.

There’s also a bigger gap that most roadmap advice skips. A roadmap shows what you planned. It doesn’t tell you whether teams adopted the tool, used the new workflow, or spent the week in meetings instead of delivery. Planning without that feedback loop is guesswork.

· 20 min read

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You’re probably managing a team through fragments. A few Jira tickets move. Pull requests get merged. Slack is busy all day. Someone says they’re blocked, someone else says they’re fine, and by Friday you still can’t tell whether the team is moving cleanly or just absorbing a lot of friction.

That’s normal in technical and hybrid work. You can see assignments and delivery, but the middle is blurry. The blur is where most management mistakes happen. People add more meetings, ask for more status updates, and tighten control when what they really need is a better read on how work is flowing.

If you want to manage a team well, stop treating performance as a mystery solved by instinct. Good managers build systems. They define how work is supposed to move, which signals matter, where interruptions come from, and when intervention helps versus when it gets in the way.

· 21 min read

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Monday morning. Finance wants the SaaS renewal list by Thursday. Facilities wants a better read on desk demand. IT is trying to work out whether the new tool rollout landed, or whether people are still living in old tabs, old habits, and local workarounds.

This defines the term office management app now. It isn’t just desks, rooms, visitors, and floor plans. It’s also app usage, licence waste, endpoint visibility, and the quiet friction that sits inside a hybrid workday.

A lot of teams still buy office tools as if the main problem is where people sit. In practice, the harder question is how work moves across devices, apps, and teams. If you can’t see that side of the office, you’re managing half the estate.

· 22 min read

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You’ve seen this meeting before.

A panel finishes a day of interviews for a systems engineer role. One candidate was easy to talk to, had the same tooling preferences as the hiring manager, and seemed like “someone who’d fit right in”. Another answered technical questions with more depth, but they were less polished and took longer to warm up. In the debrief, the first person gets described as a safer choice. The second gets tagged as “probably strong, but maybe not the right fit”.

That decision usually feels reasonable in the room. It often isn’t.

Bias in interviews rarely looks dramatic. It shows up as preference dressed up as judgement. A familiar communication style gets mistaken for competence. Shared background gets mistaken for trustworthiness. Confidence gets mistaken for capability. When that happens, your process starts rewarding the wrong signals.

For technical teams, that’s not a culture problem first. It’s a systems problem. If your interview loop allows irrelevant inputs to affect the outcome, your process is noisy. Noisy systems produce bad decisions.

The cost is bigger than one disappointing hire. You burn team time, lose candidates who could’ve raised the bar, and create hiring patterns that keep repeating because nobody can prove where the error entered the process. If you’ve ever had to calculate the true cost of a bad hire, you already know hiring mistakes don’t stay inside HR.

· 20 min read

A lot of teams have the same Jira problem and describe it in different ways.

Tickets sit in In Review with no movement. Someone moves work to Done without filling the field that another team needs. Stand-up turns into status archaeology. People stop trusting the board, then they stop updating it properly, which makes the board even less useful.

That is usually not a people problem first. It is a workflow in Jira problem.

I have seen teams blame discipline, blame remote work, blame “process overhead”, then discover the issue was simpler. The workflow did not match how work moved. It had too many states, weak transition rules, vague ownership, or no way to spot where work was stalling. A good Jira workflow is not there to impress auditors or satisfy a diagram. It should make the next action obvious, block bad handoffs, and give you clean data when something slows down.