Create a free account, or log in

ANZ brings Atlassian technology on board to help turn company culture around

Australian big-four bank ANZ has enlisted startup giant Atlassian to provide collaboration tools and give its company culture a 21st century boost.
Stephanie Palmer-Derrien
Stephanie Palmer-Derrien
Atlassian founders
Atlassian co-founders Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar.

Australian big-four bank ANZ has enlisted startup giant Atlassian to give its company culture a 21st-century boost.

The bank has signed an enterprise licence agreement to use Atlassian’s collaboration tools Jira and Confluence, and development tools Bitbucket and Bamboo, as well as adopting some of the startup success story’s strategic thinking.

The partnership is part of the ANZโ€™s shift towards a more agile working environment, which is seeing the 180-year-old bank trying to transform into a workplace more in line with the digital economy.

In an article on ANZโ€™s Bluenotes platform, the bankโ€™s group executive for technology Gerard Florian stressed the importance of maintaining a good company culture within the organisation.

โ€œGreat products come from great teams,โ€ Florian said.

โ€œGreat teams are driven by great leadership. And great leadership comes from a great culture.โ€

He noted that โ€œitโ€™s not just the software behind the successful cultureโ€, and added that ANZ is taking notes from Atlassian on how to go โ€œbeyond just using tools to improve an existing processโ€ in order to implement them into ANZโ€™s entire internal operating system.

ANZ announced that it was embarking on an โ€˜agile-based transformationโ€™ in May last year, and the partnership with Atlassian is part of its โ€˜new way of working modelโ€™ in the bank’s Australian arm.

Florian, along with ANZ chief executive Shayne Elliot and head of talent and culture Kathryn van der Merwe, spent some time in the lead up to the deal working with Atlassianโ€™s head of R&D and workplace futurist Dom Price, discussing things such as how to oversee performance management in an agile workplace while maintaining a healthy company culture,ย Florian said.

โ€œGiven we are an older organisation and weโ€™re trying to learn, these experiences are incredibly valuable,โ€ Florian added.

โ€œAs the world continues to evolve and adapt into a fast-paced digital economy, it is more important than ever to have people who can help us meet the challenges and grasp the opportunities on offer,โ€ he added.

In a statement, Price said shifting any organisationโ€™s way of thinking and working is a challenge, โ€œespecially when itโ€™s the combined thinking of more than 40,000 peopleโ€.

โ€œYou have to be open to really succeed in switching to an agile mindset, and itโ€™s great to see that openness to change, even when itโ€™s tough, from ANZ,โ€ he added.

The partnership comes just days after Atlassian announced plans to acquire Boston-based IT management platform OpsGenie for US$295 million ($409.8 million).

The announcement of the acquisition on September 4 saw Atlassianโ€™s share price jump โ€” from $US90.16 ($125.67) at the opening of the market to its highest price ever of $US92.24 ($128.57), before closing at $US91.90 ($128.09) per share.

This hype was not to last, however, with Atlassian closing the following day with a share price of $US87.61 ($122.11).

Atlassian co-founders Mike Cannon Brookes and Scott Farquhar each saw their wealth double last year, reaching the positions of 11th and 12th on the AFR Rich List, worth $5.16 billion each.

The tech giant now has a market cap of about $US20.5 billion ($28.57 billion).

NOW READ:ย The best tools to use when launching your startup, according to nine founders

NOW READ:ย Atlassianโ€™s Scott Farquhar on why startups need โ€œcreative conflictโ€: โ€˜The day of the lone genius is deadโ€™