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· 19 min read

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A lot of IT teams look productive on paper and flat in real life.

The dashboards are busy. Tickets move. Pull requests get merged. Endpoint data shows constant application switching, long active hours, and solid output. Then you sit in stand-up and hear the same dry updates in the same dead tone. One engineer is carrying too much maintenance work. Another has become the person who fixes broken pipelines but never builds anything new. A third is shipping plenty, but clearly doesn't care about the work any more.

That gap matters. Activity is easy to count. Motivation isn't.

I’ve seen teams where the problem wasn’t laziness, weak management, or bad tooling. The problem was the design of the work itself. People were doing tasks, not owning outcomes. They were visible, but not connected. They had workload, but not much reason to feel proud of it. If you’re already tracking engagement through systems such as Microsoft 365 HR engagement, you’ll know this gap shows up in more than one place. The pattern usually appears first in day-to-day behaviour.

You can also spot it in the messier signals. More tab-hopping. More half-finished work. More mental drag. If that sounds familiar, the write-up on brain fog in the workplace is worth a read because low-quality job design often feels like cognitive overload before it shows up as attrition.

The hard question is simple. How do you improve the quality of the job, not just the volume of output?

· 24 min read

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You’ve seen this meeting.

The roadmap says the next milestone is green. The project tool shows a tidy date, a reassuring status, maybe even a completion note that sounds final enough to stop questions. Then someone from engineering gives an update that feels off. QA is “still validating a few things”. Product says a dependency is “under discussion”. The team nods, but nobody looks relaxed.

That gap is where most milestone problems start.

Good project milestone management isn’t about placing flags on a timeline. It’s about proving that the work behind the flag is happening, in the right sequence, with enough quality to support the next decision. If the milestone says “on track” while the team’s day-to-day work tells a different story, the chart is lying.

Hybrid work made this easier to miss. People can sound productive in stand-ups while losing half the week to meetings, app switching, and stalled handoffs. If you care about delivery, you need more than status updates. You need signals from the work itself.

· 20 min read

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A role has been open long enough that the hiring manager has stopped asking politely. Finance wants to know why agency spend keeps climbing. The TA team feels busy, but nobody can say with confidence whether the process is working.

That’s usually when companies start talking about key performance indicators recruitment teams should track. The problem is they often stop at the easy numbers. Time. Cost. Volume. Those matter, but they only tell you what happened inside the hiring funnel. They don’t tell you whether the person you hired is doing the job well, using the right tools, or settling into productive work.

In tech, that gap matters more than people admit. A signed contract isn’t the finish line. If a new DevOps engineer still hasn’t adopted the licensed tools they need after onboarding, your recruitment data is incomplete. If a new hire is in meetings all day and never gets proper focus time, that’s not just an onboarding issue. It says something about hiring quality, role design, and manager calibration.

· 21 min read

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A lot of teams start the same way. A spreadsheet for the roadmap. Slack for approvals. A shared doc for meeting notes. Then someone adds a Kanban board, someone else keeps a private to-do list, and the release manager starts chasing status by DM because nobody trusts the board anymore.

That setup works right up until it doesn’t. Deadlines drift. Ownership gets fuzzy. Admin work grows faster than the team. At that point, most IT and operations leads land on the same shortlist: monday.com and Asana.

Both are strong products. Both can run serious work. But they solve different problems, and the wrong choice gets expensive fast. Not just in licence cost. In workflow rebuilds, automation limits, reporting gaps, unused seats, and the quiet drag of a tool people tolerate instead of actively using.

If you're still narrowing your shortlist, Toolradar’s roundup of the best project management tools is a useful starting point. Once the list is down to these two, the harder question is practical fit.

At this point, the usual feature checklist stops being helpful. Technical teams need to know what happens after rollout. Who owns setup. How much governance you get. Whether automations scale. Whether dashboards tell the truth. Whether you can prove adoption instead of assuming it.

· 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.