Hello,
As you see in the comments of https://community.atlassian.com/forums/Navigation-Refresh-articles/The-new-navigation-Coming-to-you-in-2025/ba-p/2800982 (since it was made available), there is a lot of negative feedback coming for this navigation.
I have to full agree with all those comments stating that this is an awful regression and is really an bad design.
I need to switch often between multiple projects, dashboards, filters, and apps during my day, and many of my colleagues need as well.
Previously, all of this was easily reachable from the top navigation, sorted into categories, and showing the last accessed or favorites by group.
Now, you'll have a loooooooooooong list of sidebar items you need to scroll through, read and identify each of them.
We have a lot of similar named boards and queues, so "starring" them doesn't work, because it does not show to which projects those belong.
The comments on the linked post from top mentions a lot of valid points:
- Slows down workflow
- significant decline in user experience
- The same problems that users reported in 2018 (when this feature was later rolled back)
- causes a LOT of clutter and noise
- terrible, it feels old and antiquated
- not user friendly at all. It introduces so much noise and makes finding things and navigating so much harder
- more confusing and cluttered
- I'll have an extra step in order to get to Your Work, Projects, and Filters
- Hours and hours of wasted productivity
- It’s cluttered, not streamlined
- UI is honestly overwhelming
- "Decluttering" shouldn't mean burying the stuff we use daily
- teams will spend more time clicking around trying to find things than actually doing their work
- You say this is about empowering users, but you’ve done the opposite
- I don't get how in 2025 you think having a Sidebar is a good idea
- It's like it has been tested with account that only have 1 project to administer
(Please go to the link above to read the comments in full and put my selection of copy&paste into context)
The quintessence is:
- Listen to your (paying!) customer base.
- Don't mess with things that are not broken. Or give the users a way out.
Atlassian was once a company that cared greatly about product usability.
Be that company again.
Marco Dieckhoff
Head of IT Infrastructure & Operations
Skymetrix
Braunschweig, Germany
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