The Project Management Office (PMO) plays a relevant role when helping enterprise organizations turn strategy into execution. At scale, the action of managing projects is not enough, and that’s when the project governance comes into play. This is why we will show you why having established a PMO governance for your Jira, and even comparing it with what the Atlassian platform has to offer, and interacting with it, will make all your systems go smoothly.
In enterprise environments, projects don’t fail because of people; more often, they fail because, usually, decisions are delayed, priorities are unclear, and there’s a lack of project data that breaks the flow.
However, a well defined PMO governance model established in Jira offers the structure to make decisions based on transparency, consistency, and giving context to stakeholders. This provides the information needed on how the project, program, and portfolio are monitored.
In fact, the Project Management Institute (PMI) describes the governance of portfolios (and everything that comes with them) as increasingly vital to the success of enterprise initiatives, stressing that not many organizations have it in place. This is based on evidence. A study conducted by the PMI and PwC found that organizations with more advanced PMO maturity were more likely to outperform peers on business indicators such as revenue, customer loyalty, and Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) results.
These results lay a simple fact: If you are using Jira, governance shouldn’t live outside the tool. Everything should be standardized and centralized. As the operational work (which is more likely to be happening there already), the governance should also be structured, reported, reviewed, and escalated in the same place.
This is a common mistake across different environments, especially those more “agile.” Setting these boundaries that come with the governance is about helping the PMO to reduce noise, improve focus, and make better decisions, based on a system of shared values that enhances and automates work evaluation, risk assessment, reporting, and aligning initiatives with business goals. It’s not about adding more friction.
The obvious statement comes with the fact that reporting cannot be separated from governance. If reporting is weak, governance will follow. Inconsistent data leads leaders to make incompetent decisions.
A proper PMO governance model gives enterprise organizations a structure to turn strategy into sustainable execution. This ensures that projects are not just moving forward but in the right direction. When governance is in place, it's possible to align sustainability goals, improve visibility, and give stakeholders the context they need. This is why the following reasons are important for the enterprise PMO:
Starting from a situation where you already have a Jira in place for operational work, the governance should be reflected in a way that adapts to the way Jira is configured and used across the enterprise. This is why it’s important to define how it’s used at:
When those three levels are connected in Jira, governance becomes a System of Work, and when disconnected, reporting becomes noise, and decision-making means nothing…
As Jira is a strong resource tool to manage everyday work, many enterprise-level companies struggle more with a work item tracking system.
In the simplest version of this scenario, big companies usually need structured project data. As simple as that. They need to compare, track, and get deep about different initiatives/projects, track their budgets, dig into the team capacity, and export portfolio data for exclusive reporting, such as audits or BI analysis. Are in these situations that the PMO feels the gap between delivery and governance.
To help companies to standardize and control project management in Jira, this collection that includes modules such as Projectrak, Budgety, Capacity, and Exporter, adds that layer for projects, which is precisely missing in Jira, specifically for the PMO.
Let’s go through each of the modules to check how each is helping the PMO in Jira:
Atlassian is building a platform in the Cloud, an idea reinforced by the Data Center End Of Life (EOL) announcement, alongside a tight timeline with different milestones. This is why you need to consider which Atlassian Apps you have, and how you want to configure them:
With Atlassian, currently, it's possible to have this same model across their platform, beyond just Jira. It provides: Managing project portfolio with Atlassian Projects & Goals outside Jira. Budgets, with another tool. And team capacity with a specific view, also outside Jira. Leaving reporting to Atlassian Analytics. Also, not in Jira.
All of these, while in Jira projects, are now Spaces.
On the other side, with the PMO Collection for Jira, it’s possible to add project data, project finances, team capacity, and a reporting structure that many PMOs need to govern just within Jira. Considering that with this project layer within Jira, you get the projects back in just one environment.
For enterprise businesses, PMO governance does not fail because of methodologies or frameworks. It usually fail it fails because the information is fragmented across tools and people, reporting is too operational, and the decision model is not clear.
If your organization uses Jira, a mature governance model should be visible in the way work is structured, permissions are defined, dashboards are shared, plans are reviewed, and portfolio data is managed.
The PMO Collection for Jira helps to complement that model by adding the project-level structure and reporting depth that the enterprise PMO often needs to turn Jira into a stronger governance environment.