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Atlassian brings AI visual tools and partner agents to Confluence, 1 month after cutting 1,600 jobs

April 8, 2026
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In short: Atlassian is rolling out Remix, a visual AI tool in open beta that transforms Confluence pages into charts, infographics, and scorecards without requiring users to open another application, alongside three partner agents built on the Model Context Protocol that will carry Confluence content directly into Lovable, Replit, and Gamma from April 13. The announcement arrives less than a month after Atlassian cut 1,600 jobs explicitly to fund AI investment.

Knowledge management software has a presentation problem. Teams invest enormous effort documenting decisions, specifications, and meeting outcomes in Confluence, and then spend comparable effort manually reformatting that same content into the charts, prototypes, and presentations that different audiences actually need. Atlassian is attempting to close that gap with two interconnected announcements on Wednesday: a visual generation tool called Remix that keeps output tethered to its source, and a set of pre-built agents that hand Confluence content directly to partner applications.

Remix: documentation that transforms itself

Remix, now in open beta, allows teams to highlight any content on a Confluence page, a paragraph, a table, or an entire document, and instruct the tool to generate a visual from it. At launch, supported output formats include data visualisations, infographics, scorecards, and charts, with Atlassian stating additional formats will be added over time. The resulting visual is layered on top of the original content and linked to the source, meaning it updates as the underlying page changes and does not require a separate export or file management workflow.

The intelligence guiding Remix’s format recommendations comes from the Teamwork Graph, Atlassian’s unified data layer built from more than 100 billion data points across Jira, Confluence, and connected enterprise tools. Rather than asking users to choose a format manually, Remix uses that graph to surface the visual type most likely to be useful given the content’s structure and the organisation’s usage patterns, a quarterly roadmap page, for instance, might prompt a scorecard; a dataset might prompt a chart.

Sanchan Saxena, Atlassian’s senior vice president of product for the Teamwork Collection, framed the tool as an attempt to make the platform recede: “With Remix and agents in Confluence, a single page becomes the starting point for whatever comes next: a clear story for leaders, a prototype for builders, or a walkthrough for customers, all from the same source of truth.”

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Three agents that cross the application boundary

Where Remix keeps output inside Confluence, the partner agents announced alongside it are designed to move content out of Confluence and into specialist tools without any manual copying or custom integration work. Three agents are launching on April 13: Lovable, which converts a product specification into a working user interface prototype; Replit, which turns a technical document into a starter application that an engineer can fork and build upon; and Gamma, which transforms meeting notes or a status page into a polished presentation.

Each agent is invoked directly from a Confluence page through Rovo Chat. When triggered, the agent reads the page’s content and metadata, including authorship, project association, and decision context, and carries all of it into the partner tool without requiring the user to manually reconstruct that context on the other side. The artifact produced, a prototype in Lovable, a codebase in Replit, a deck in Gamma — links back to the source page it came from, preserving the chain of reference between documentation and output.

For administrators, setup requires no custom scripting. Enabling a partner’s Model Context Protocol server in Atlassian Administration takes a matter of minutes, after which the agent appears in the team’s Rovo directory, pre-configured by the partner and inheriting the workspace’s existing permissions and context.

MCP as the open standard

The technical foundation for the partner agents is the Model Context Protocol, the open standard that has rapidly become the connective tissue of the agentic software ecosystem. Atlassian’s choice to build on MCP rather than a proprietary integration layer is a deliberate strategic signal: any partner can build an agent that works with Confluence content without waiting for Atlassian to construct a bespoke connection. The protocol is open and the server documented, meaning the barrier to joining the ecosystem is technical competence rather than a bilateral commercial agreement with Atlassian.

The three launch partners span different use cases by design. Replit, which also features as a launch partner in Anthropic’s recently announced enterprise software marketplace, represents the developer workflow; Lovable the product design and prototyping workflow; Gamma the executive communication workflow. Together they cover the three primary audiences for whom Confluence documentation most consistently needs to be reformatted before it becomes actionable.

The AI pivot in context

Atlassian cut 1,600 people from its payroll in March, approximately 10% of its global workforce, with chief executive Mike Cannon-Brookes stating that the savings would be redirected into AI investment and enterprise sales. The company simultaneously replaced its chief technology officer, splitting the role between two executives: Taroon Mandhana as CTO Teamwork and Vikram Rao as CTO Enterprise and Chief Trust Officer. Remix and the partner agents are, in effect, the first significant product announcement since that restructuring, and a direct demonstration of what that investment is intended to produce.

The competitive pressure is real. Microsoft’s own terms of service now describe Copilot as for entertainment purposes, a characterisation that surfaced as Copilot’s accuracy Net Promoter Score dropped to -24.1 by September 2025, with nearly half of lapsed users citing distrust of its answers as the primary reason they stopped using it. Atlassian’s approach, embedding AI into workflows that already contain verified organisational context rather than asking users to interact with a general-purpose chat interface, is a direct response to that failure mode. Rovo has reached five million monthly active users, according to Atlassian’s own reporting, suggesting the positioning is landing with enterprise teams even as the company’s share price has reflected broader investor anxiety about conventional SaaS tools in an agentic AI era.

Workplace AI adoption surged through 2025, with tools like Microsoft 365 Copilot becoming common fixtures on office desktops, but the consensus among enterprise technology teams shifted from enthusiasm to scepticism as accuracy issues and context limitations became apparent in production. Atlassian’s bet with Remix and the MCP-based agents is that the solution is not better general-purpose AI but AI that is anchored in the specific knowledge a team has already produced, and that the role of a platform like Confluence is less to store that knowledge than to make it continuously available in whatever form the work requires next.

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