Atlassian splits its JIRA Project Tracking Service into 3 standalone offerings

Ngoc Huynh

Atlassian, which according to recent reports secretly filed for an IPO last month, today announced a major update to its flagship JIRA project and issue tracking service. The company is breaking JIRA into three separate standalone products: JIRA Software for software teams; JIRA Core for business teams; and JIRA Service Desk for IT teams and other service teams.

While JIRA quickly gained in popularity with development teams after its launch 13 years ago, it’s also seeing large growth among non-technical teams now, and Atlassian wants to capitalize on this. The standalone products will come in hosted and self-hosted versions, with prices starting at $10 per month for up to 10 users (with Service desk starting at $10 per month for up to three users).

As Atlassian president Jay Simons told me, this isn’t just a significant release for the company, but maybe “the biggest release for Atlassian — maybe ever.”

JIRA Software is essentially the current version of the service, with a focus on agile software development teams. The company made some user experience updates to the service (which also apply to the two new JIRA editions), as well as updates around the boards that form the core of the JIRA experience.

JIRA Service Desk was previously available as an add-on to the core JIRA service. It’s now a standalone product, too.

JIRA Core is really the new offering here. The team adapted the service to non-technical teams by removing all of the software-specific parts. As Simons told me, the idea here is to supports general team project collaborations. The team added new templates for these general projects and made project, task and issue pages easier to work with. According to Simons, Atlassian worked with a number of companies that were already using JIRA with non-technical teams to fine tune this product.

“This opens up new opportunities for a product that is in high demand,” Simons said. “This means JIRA will get used for more kinds of collaborative work.” He believes that in many organizations, JIRA will be able to reduce the number of internal emails and big spreadsheets that too many teams still use to stay organized.

JIRA is currently in use at over 35,000 companies across 165 countries. The company says its JIRA Cloud product saw more than 50 percent users growth each year over the last three years.

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Source : http://techcrunch.com/