Atlassian is changing, and they are doing it fast! Those are great news, especially if you’re new to their apps, this became more evident after their announcement of Data Center EOL, which is accelerating and strengthening their Cloud Platform. Here, Atlassian Collections stands in the middle, as they started announcing them since early 2025. We’re explaining in this blog post each Atlassian Collection: Teamwork, Service, Software & Strategy, what they include, how they work, and which benefits you can expect from each.
Imagine that your company have one place where plans, code, service, and strategy all click together, What that would change for you and your team? Atlassian’s Collections of apps are built for exactly that: specific outcome-focused bundles that unify everyday work and add AI where it actually helps.
Many organizations already use Atlassian apps, and the pain they usually undergo isn’t having too many tools but the gap that exists between them.
This is precisely why Atlassian has created Collections, sitting on Atlassian’s System of Work and the Teamwork Graph, allows context moving with people, from Confluence pages and Work Items and Jira Spaces, to Atlassian Projects, code, incidents, and Goals, all of these supported, at the same time, by artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities that allows to summarize meetings, create work with full context, and surface the next best step.
Across the four Collections Atlassian has announced so far, the “what” is consistent: curated apps accompanied by AI, sold and supported as one. The “why” differs by team: collaborate in one workspace (Teamwork), connect strategy to people and delivery (Strategy), deliver great service with the right context (Service), and ship better software with clear health and flow signals (Software). Collections are synonym of specific enterprise solutions.
Atlassian Collections are packaged sets of apps and AI agents designed around how teams actually work (Teamwork Graph!). Instead of stitching apps together yourself, you start with a bundle that already shares data, permissions, and context. That’s why, for example, recording a Loom can become a summarized Confluence page and then linked to the work in Jira work without jumping from app to app.
Atlassian Collection of apps within the Atlassian Cloud Platform
Then, What does each Atlassian Collection specifically offers? Let’s go through each of them:
Atlassian’s Teamwork Collection is the one for all teams and projects. It brings planning, knowledge, async video, and AI into one workspace so everyone sees the same story and momentum never stalls.
The Atlassian Teamwork Collections sits across all teams and roles
Announced at the beginning of 2025, this collection was also associated to our bundle of apps (Projectrak, Budgety, Allocaty & Exporter) focused on solving PMO challenges. Atlassian recognized that at the beginning of 2025 by awarding us the Atlassian Teamwork Foundations Apps recognition.
What’s inside the Atlassian Teamwork Collection?: Jira, Confluence, Loom, and Rovo teamwork agents. Also, Guard’s Standard version is included with the Premium and Enterprise plan.
In practice, Loom captures discussions, the Loom Meeting Assistant turns them into summaries and action items, that information lands in Confluence and become structured Jira work. Because the Teamwork Graph enriches work items with related Work Items and Spaces, allowing teams to avoid rework and back-and-forths.
In this collection, Rovo brings Agents such as the Brainstorm Facilitator, Diagram Creator, Workflow Builder, Meeting Insights Reporter, allowing planning and documentation speeding up without losing quality.
The Atlassian Service Collection it’s basically an AI-powered service focused set of apps that goes across employees and customers. It unifies request management, incidents/changes, a flexible Configuration Management Database (CMDB), and customer support allowing context following the ticket flow and that way, teams can solve issues faster.
The Atlassian Service Collection helps solve issues faster
What’s inside the Atlassian Service Collection?: Jira Service Management (JSM), Customer Service Management (CSM), Assets, and Rovo for deflection and agents. Among this set of apps, CSM, a new app, adds an on-brand support site, omnichannel intake, and a team workspace backed by Jira.
Assets, a very pivotal app in this collection is getting the lead by connecting what’s in play (devices, services, and people) to requests and incidents, this alongside with discovery, adapters, and reporting to keep data current. Allowing that all this context help to reduce risk and shorten time to restore.
And last but not least, Rovo and JSM brings AI helping to surface knowledge to offer customer context and suggestions, making out of self-service and improved experience focusing more into resolving than searching.
The Atlassian Software Collection provides a Software Development Life Cycle (SDLC) running on an AI platform, giving more visibility into code, pipelines, and developer experience. The Software Collection aims to reduce friction across the SDLC process making it smooth and improving measurement.
The Atlassian Software Collection helps devs teams to coordinate better and bring visibility to their work
What’s inside the Atlassian Software Collection?: Rovo Dev, Bitbucket Pipelines, Bitbucket, Compass, and DX (a recent Atlassian acquisition).
In this collection, Rovo Dev works where developers are in: Integrated Development Environments (IDE), Command Line Interfaces (CLI), Jira, and Bitbucket, helping them with the planning, code generation, reviews, and build troubleshootings.
In this case, Compass provides catalogs, health markers, and a DevEx dashboard to spot bottlenecks and track DORA. On the other side, Pipelines centralizes Continuous Integration/Continuous Delivery (CI/CD) and policy enforcement. This bundle together offers leaders to see the flow of work, and engineers get fewer blockers and clearer context.
The Atlassian Strategy Collection is the one that connects strategy to people, work, and funds, everything centralized to model plans, map talent, and track value through delivery. And how they do this?
The Atlassian Strategy Collection helps to align team, their work and funds.
What’s inside the Atlassian Strategy Collection?: Focus, which is an enterprise strategy app, Talent, a knowledge-workforce planning app, Align, which allows enterprise work planning, and Rovo which is Atlassian’s artificial intelligence machine.
⚠️It’s also important to mention that Atlassian notes that Jira Cloud Premium is required to purchase in order to have this collection top performing.⚠️
By implementing this bundle solution, leaders get real-time visibility into goals, dependencies, capacity, and outcomes, and can move faster from insight to action. Strategy also integrates with Teamwork and other Atlassian cloud apps, so the plan and the work finally live on the same place.
⚡And there's also one more Collection to be announced that will be focused on helping those teams working and creating software Products. If you see the image at the beginning, there's still one color (purple) that represents this collection of apps.⚡
The choice will be given by your needs. That said, starting with the problem and not the products, is the right focus. This quick guide is aimed to help you choose which Atlassian Collection suits you better and which one helps you tackle your biggest bottleneck. So, let’s overall trying to answer this question:
When your tools share one platform backed by the same data model and AI capabilities, context moves fast with the work, from Loom, to Confluence to Jira, to Align or Focus. Whatever the case is, the payoff represents fewer status meetings, faster handoffs, and decisions made having the full picture.
That cohesion shows up in numbers and outcomes. According to Atlassian, teams report 92% spend less time searching, 29% fewer meetings, and 75% faster project delivery when Jira, Confluence, Loom, and Rovo work together.
For service teams, linking Assets to requests and incidents cuts risk, speeds resolution, and can reduce CMDB spend, on the other hand, software leaders get DORA visibility and a DevEx dashboard to spot bottlenecks and improve productivity across the SDLC, and at the portfolio level, the Strategy Collection brings real-time visibility and faster moves from insight to action.
In short, one connected platform turns everyday work into measurable ROI, providing less busy work, more flow and outcomes, allowing C-levels and customers feeling satisfied.
As Jira Projects become Jira Spaces, and Atlassian Projects go across all Atlassian apps, be sure not to lose Jira project-level control.
Discover how Projectrak for Jira keeps portfolio data centralized, aligns stakeholders where work happens, and preserves the governance you rely on by clicking the link below.
These Stories on Project Management
No Comments Yet
Let us know what you think