Why leaders get confused

If you’ve already turned on Atlassian Intelligence, Rovo can sound like overlap: another AI label, another feature set, another risk surface. That confusion is understandable. When it comes to Rovo vs Atlassian Intelligence, the two are closely related, yet they serve different purposes.

Now that Atlassian is rolling out “Rovo for all” as part of paid Cloud subscriptions, the key questions become:

  • What does Atlassian Intelligence cover on its own?
  • When does Rovo add something genuinely new?
  • How should we plan governance and investment across both?

This article gives you a pragmatic way to answer those questions.

Atlassian Intelligence in a nutshell

Atlassian Intelligence is the AI layer embedded directly into Atlassian Cloud products. It focuses on assistance inside each tool.

Take Jira Software and Jira Work Management, for instance: it supports natural language search and JQL help, issue summaries, better descriptions and automation rules (“When a bug is created, set due date in 7 days…”) as outlined in Rovo AI features in Jira | Atlassian Support.

Confluence users benefit from AI-assisted content generation, editing and summarizing directly in the editor, along with the ability to ask questions against pages and explain internal terms (see Atlassian AI in Confluence | Atlassian).

For service teams, Jira Service Management gains virtual agents, ticket summaries and faster handovers.

In short, Atlassian Intelligence:

  • Lives inside Jira, Confluence, JSM and other products
  • Improves content, search and automation at the work‑item level
  • Has relatively low change‑management overhead – users discover it as “smarter buttons” they already use

Rovo in a nutshell

Rovo is the cross‑product AI solution built on top of the Atlassian platform and its Teamwork Graph. It adds apps and capabilities that span multiple tools and data sources.

The key components are described at Rovo capabilities and features for Atlassian Cloud | Rovo | Atlassian Support and in the Rovo Primer at Rovo: A Primer

  • Rovo Search for natural language Q&A across Jira, Confluence, JSM and connected SaaS tools, respecting the original permissions.
  • Rovo Chat for conversational assistance that can draw on multiple sources and take actions such as creating Jira issues or updating work.
  • Rovo Agents and Studio to design and run specialised AI agents and cross‑tool workflows.

Rovo is being made available as part of paid Jira, Confluence, JSM and Teamwork Collection plans under “Rovo for all”, with usage governed by Rovo credits rather than a separate per‑user licence (see https://support.atlassian.com/rovo/docs/rovo-usage-limits/).

In short, Rovo:

  • Operates across multiple Atlassian and SaaS tools
  • Adds standalone apps (Search, Chat, Studio)
  • Introduces a wider governance surface: connectors, agents, cross‑tool actions

The official comparison in plain language

Here is how Atlassian summarizes the differences:

  • Atlassian Intelligence enhances individual products. It uses AI to make Jira, Confluence, JSM and others faster and easier to use.
  • Rovo connects those products (and other tools) together and lets people and agents search, reason and act across them.

Thinking about it this way helps with planning:

  • If your main pain is productivity inside Jira or Confluence, Atlassian Intelligence covers most of that.
  • If your main pain is “finding and orchestrating work across tools” (status, knowledge, incidents, decisions) Rovo is where you look.

Where Atlassian Intelligence is “enough” for now

There are many organisations where it’s reasonable to focus on Atlassian Intelligence for now:

  • You mainly want help writing, searching and summarising inside Jira, Confluence and JSM.
  • You’re still cleaning up your data and permissions and don’t yet want cross‑tool AI.
  • You lack capacity to govern connectors and custom agents.

In those environments, your initial AI roadmap can be:

  • Enable Atlassian Intelligence once trust basics are reviewed.
  • Encourage use for documentation, ticket handling and better search in each product.
  • Track impact with simple measures like time saved per task or ticket handling efficiency.

Rovo can stay in the background while you build confidence and improve data quality.

Where Rovo becomes a strategic differentiator

Rovo becomes relevant when your questions are more cross‑cutting:

  • “How do we let people ask questions once and search across Jira, Confluence, SharePoint, Google Drive and Slack?”
  • “How do we automate sequences of tasks that span projects, products and teams?”
  • “How do we make AI agents part of standard workflows rather than product‑specific experiments?”

The kinds of outcomes you can unlock with Rovo:

  • Consolidated views of initiative status across Jira, Confluence and support tools.
  • Faster incident or problem analysis by pulling tickets, retrospectives and runbooks into a single answer.
  • Agents in Rovo Studio that handle triage or analysis tasks and push the results back into Jira or Confluence.

At this point you’re not simply “using AI features”: you are running AI as a platform capability, with clear owners, guardrails and metrics.

Trust, data and usage

From a risk and governance perspective, it helps to understand the shared ground and the differences, as laid out in the trust resources:

Key points:

  • Both Atlassian Intelligence and Rovo sit under Atlassian’s broader compliance posture (including SOC 2 and ISO 27001 coverage for AI).
  • Both respect existing permissions in Jira, Confluence and other products.
  • Rovo adds connectors to third‑party tools. For some connectors, Rovo can index entire workspaces (for example Google Drive or SharePoint), with options to narrow scope via blocklists and policies.
  • Rovo stores chat and agent data for a short period (around a month) to support history and safety. Atlassian Intelligence largely works with the content already present in your products.

On usage and cost, Rovo features consume credits, but Atlassian is not currently billing for excess usage and has committed to provide notice and require opt‑in before any chargeable overage is introduced (see https://support.atlassian.com/rovo/docs/rovo-usage-limits/).

For leadership this translates to: you can pilot Rovo responsibly, provided you:

  • Involve security, compliance and data owners early.
  • Define a connector strategy and acceptable use guidelines.
  • Monitor usage against the outcomes you want, not just against quota.

How to position this in your roadmap

A simple framing you can use internally:

  • Phase 1: Product AI
    Focus on Atlassian Intelligence. Improve how teams work inside Jira, Confluence and JSM.
  • Phase 2: Cross‑product AI
    Pilot Rovo Search and Chat across Atlassian tools, then add a small number of carefully chosen external connectors.
  • Phase 3: AI as a platform
    Use Rovo Studio and agents for multi‑step workflows and automation, with clear ownership, governance and success measures.

The question is not “Rovo vs Atlassian Intelligence?” so much as “Where are we on this curve, and what should we turn on next?”

Where a Rovo Maturity Assessment helps

A Rovo Maturity Assessment gives you:

  • A view of where you sit today on the product‑AI vs platform‑AI spectrum.
  • A recommendation on what to enable now, what to defer, and what to fix first (permissions, connectors, governance).
  • A roadmap that links Atlassian Intelligence and Rovo to your broader AI and knowledge strategy.

If you’re unsure whether to treat Rovo as a small experiment or as a strategic platform, that’s usually the right moment to run a structured assessment.

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