Viewing work

This page refers to the usage of the improved planning interface in Portfolio for Jira (version 3.0 and later). If you're using a Portfolio for Jira live plan (any version from 2.0 to 2.27), refer to the documentation in this section.

When planning work, you're likely to be managing multiple issues that span multiple projects. It's easy to lose track of your work at one point or another, when you're across multiple work streams.

The roadmap view of your plan lets you see all the work that's relevant to you. The improved interface lets you use the different elements in this view, so you can focus on only the relevant details. For example, you can deep-dive into the details by narrowing down the available filters, or go wider by expanding the timeframe or hierarchy levels.

1Select the hierarchy levels from which and to which you want to view issues.
2

Click to expand an issue to view its child issues.

You can also quickly expand or collapse the issues in the hierarchy.

In doing so, the issues will be expanded according to the hierarchy levels that have been set. In the example above, the hierarchy levels are set from initiative to story. This means that all issues from the initiative level down to the story level will be expanded.

Any issues that have been marked as done in Jira, that don't have a resolution set, will not be included in the plan.

3

At the bottom of the scope section, you'll find the issues without parent section, which displays the issues that do not belong to any parent issue when expanded.

This section also displays the issues according to their hierarchy levels. Expand a hierarchy level to view the issues of that hierarchy level.

4

Use filters to display the relevant issues in your plan, like projects, releases, teams, issue details, and more. See Filtering issues for more details.

5

Choose the issue details that you want to display in your plan, which include:

  • issue details that Portfolio accesses from Jira, which may include assignees, issue statuses, sprints, releases, dependencies, and more
  • any custom fields existing in Portfolio, like target start datestarget end dates, and teams
  • any custom fields configured in Jira, like single-line text fields and single-choice select fields

See Displaying issue details to learn more.

6

Above the timeline section, choose the timeframe settings as needed:

  • 3M: for the next 3 months, starting from the current day
  • 1Y: for a year, starting from the current day
  • Fit: for displaying issues to fit the width of the timeline, based on the earliest start date, earliest release, latest end date, and latest release of all issues in the plan. Note that any filters that have been configured in the roadmap will also be taken into account when using this setting.
  • Custom: within a particular date range that you can set

Notes when configuring timeframe settings

You may have issues with target start dates or target end dates that go beyond the selected timeframe. For such issues, you'll see an arrow at the end of the schedule bar — this arrow indicates that the target date goes beyond the timeline.

In the example below, the timeframe is set to 1 year, and you have an issue has a start date of 07 Jan 19, which goes beyond the timeline.

By clicking the arrow of the schedule bar, the timeframe jumps to the start date of the issue, while the timeframe automatically sets itself into the corresponding custom date range.

7

Customize the view of the timeline, to make it easier for your audience to consume your plan. The following view settings are available:

  • Group by: Group issues into separate swimlanes. One swimlane is allocated for each group, and you have several grouping options to choose from.
  • Color by: Color issues using several coloring options. Depending on how you're coloring issues by, you may need to assign colors to certain items.
  • Rolled-up values: For parent issues, display a preview of the rolled-up values (estimates, teams, and releases) of the child issues in the corresponding fields.

See Customizing view settings to know more.

8

View the details of a release in your plan. This is helpful in monitoring if any releases are off track.

See Managing releases and Monitoring releases for more details.

9

The schedule bar, which represents the schedule duration of an issue in a plan, based on the target dates that have been set for the issue.

Ideally, an issue would have both target start and target end dates, but it's quite possible for an issue to have just one of the dates. In this case, the schedule bar displays in a solid color on the end of the target date that's been set. The solid color gradually fades towards the other end of the schedule bar, where the target date hasn't been set.

For newly created plans and existing plans where the improved interface is enabled for the first time, the following will take place by default:

  • The plan will display issues starting from the highest hierarchy level that has at least 2 issues. If the plan has at least 2 issues at the highest initiative level, then it will display issues starting with initiatives.
  • If the plan has only 1 issue at any level above epics, then the issues will be displayed starting at the epic level.
  • The target start date, target end date, and status columns will be displayed in the fields section.
  • The issues are displayed to fit the width of the timeline, based on the earliest start date, earliest release, latest end date, and latest release of all issues in the plan.
  • You can change these details and settings any time moving forward. See Displaying issue details for more information.

Last modified on Dec 30, 2019

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