

The Hubstaff integration let's you map Jira projects to Hubstaff projects automatically or manually, so you could potentially feed all Jira projects into one Hubstaff project if you really want everything in one list (might require some testing).It seems like syncing with Asana has got to be possible too, but I have not looked into or tried it (yet).Ĭurrently, I sync Jira issues with Hubstaff, which is a time tracker that has a pretty straightforward approach to tasks and allows adding new tasks separate from the Jira project. I have successfully done what you describe using TimeDoctor. with To dos for Jira issues or-probably not what you're looking for-sync to Outlook with Microsoft to do for jira. You might be able to just use Jira itself, e.g. There are options, but your operating system, office platform, Jira hosting, and level of admin privileges plus sensitivity to data privacy may affect which options apply.

At work, we use Jira tasks and/or Confluence checklists for tracking work-related tasks. For whatever it make be worth, I use/love Todoist too - in my personal life. (It's also possible they are new to the ecosystem and didn't consider this carefully enough, but I prefer to give them the benefit of the doubt. It's possible Todoist approached it that way but overestimated what percentage of Jira users would want the integration -at least for your instance anyway. So, it's incumbent upon the app vendors (I work for one) to take that into consideration when pricing their apps, recognizing that for many apps not every Jira use will use their app. And that means, among other things, the user license for the Jira app you offer has to match the underlying Jira license (user for user, data center for data center, and so on). Hi, Cash. As far as I understand it anyway, to be on the Atlassian Marketplace you have to play by Atlassian rules.
