Get started as a Stakeholder

Azure DevOps Services | Azure DevOps Server 2022 - Azure DevOps Server 2019

Stakeholders are users with free but limited access to Azure DevOps features and functions. With Stakeholder access, you can add and modify work items, manage build and release pipelines, and view dashboards. You can check project status and provide direction, feedback, feature ideas, and business alignment to a team. For more information, see Create your first pipeline and Supported source repositories.

Stakeholders are users with free but limited access to Azure DevOps features and functions. With Stakeholder access, you can add and modify work items, view and approve pipelines, and view dashboards. You can check project status and provide direction, feedback, feature ideas, and business alignment to a team.

For more information, see the Stakeholder access quick reference and the feature matrix.

Prerequisites

Private project:

  • Access levels: Have Stakeholder access.
    To get access as a Stakeholder, ask your organization owner or Project Collection Administrator to add you to a project with Stakeholder access. For more information, see Add organization users and manage access.
    To get access as a Stakeholder, ask your server administrator to add you to a security group that has Stakeholder access. For more information, see Change access levels.
  • Permissions: Be a member of the Contributors or Project Administrators group. You can view boards, open and modify work items, and add child tasks to a checklist. You can't reorder or reparent a backlog item by using the drag-and-drop method. You can't update a field on a card.

Public project:

  • Access levels: Have Stakeholder access.
  • Permissions: Be a member of the Contributors or Project Administrators group to have full access to all Azure Boards features. For more information, see Default permissions quick reference.

Sign in to a project

  1. Select the link provided in your email invitation or open a browser window and enter the URL for the web portal.

    https://dev.azure.com/OrganizationName/ProjectName

    http://ServerName:8080/tfs/DefaultCollection/ProjectName

    For example, to connect to the server named FabrikamPrime and the project named Contoso, enter http://FabrikamPrime:8080/tfs/DefaultCollection/Contoso.

  2. Enter your credentials. If you can't sign in, ask the organization owner or Project Administrator to add you as a member of the project with Stakeholder access.

Understand work items and types

Work items support planning and tracking work. Each work item is based on a work item type. Each work item is assigned an identifier, which is unique in an organization or project collection.

Different work items track different types of work. The work item types available are based on the process that was used when your project was created. The options are Agile, Basic, Scrum, or Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI), as illustrated in the following images. For more information, see About work items and work item types.

The following image shows the hierarchy for the Agile process backlog work item:

Diagram that shows Agile work item types.

  • User Stories and tasks are used to track work.
  • Bugs track code defects.
  • Epics and features are used to group work under larger scenarios.

Each team can configure how they manage Bug work items at the same level as User Story or Task work items. Use the Working with bugs setting. For more information about using these work item types, see Agile process.

Open your board

After you connect to a project, you can view work items.

  1. In your project, select Boards > Boards. From the dropdown menu, select a team board.

    Screenshot that shows opening your board, cloud version.

    You can also enter a keyword in the search box or select View Board directory to see a list of available team boards.

    Screenshot that shows selecting another team's board.

    Tip

    Select the star icon to make a team board a favorite. Favorite artifacts ( favorite icon) appear at the top of the team selector list.

  2. Ensure that for the backlog level, you select:

    • Stories for Agile.
    • Issues for Basic.
    • Backlog items for Scrum.
    • Requirements for CMMI.

    Screenshot that shows the menu to select the product backlog level option of Backlog items, Stories, Issues, or Requirements.

  1. In your project, select Boards > Boards. From the dropdown menu, select a team board.

    Screenshot that shows opening your board in on-premises versions.

    To select another team's board, open the selector. Then select a different team, or select the Browse all team boards option. Or, you can enter a keyword in the search box to filter the list of team backlogs for the project.

    Screenshot that shows selecting another team's board in on-premises versions.

    Tip

    Select the star icon to make a team board a favorite. Favorite artifacts ( favorite icon) appear at the top of the team selector list.

  2. Check that for the backlog level you selected:

    • Stories for Agile.
    • Issues for Basic.
    • Backlog items for Scrum.
    • Requirements for CMMI.

    Screenshot that shows selecting the product backlog level option of Backlog items, Stories, Issues, or Requirements for on-premises versions.

Add work items

From your board, select the plus sign, enter a title, and then select Enter.

Screenshot that shows the highlighted New item button.

From the board, you can't add work items, but you can open them and annotate them. To add work items, open the backlog by selecting the Backlog link. Also, you can't update the status of a work item by using the drag-and-drop method to move a different column or reorder cards within a column.

For more information, see View and add work items.

Update work items

Your work item forms might differ from the following images, but the functionality is the same.

Change status

Drag a work item downstream as you finish work.

Screenshot that shows a board that uses an Agile template to update the status of a work item.

Note

Stakeholders can only use the drag-and-drop method to move cards to different columns with the Azure DevOps Server 2020.1 update. For more information, see the Release Notes.

Add details

To open a work item, double-click the title or highlight it, and then select Enter. This example shows how to assign work. You can only assign work to a user who was added to the project.

This example assigns the story to Raisa Pokrovskaya and at-mentions Raisa in a discussion note. When you're finished, select Save & Close.

Screenshot that shows details in the Discussion box on the User Story work item form.

To add more details, change field values, add a description or tags, and add comments. For more information, see:

View as backlog

Check the product backlog to see how the team prioritized their work. Backlog items appear in priority order. Work item types might include bugs, depending on the process used when your project was created. For more information, see About default processes and process templates.

From the board, select View as backlog.

Screenshot that shows View as backlog in a cloud version.

From the board, select View as backlog. Screenshot that shows View as backlog in an on-premises version.

The list of backlog items appears in priority order. You can add a backlog item, which goes to the bottom of the list. With Stakeholder access, you can't reprioritize work.

Find work items

Select Boards > Work Items. Then select an option from the dropdown menu. For example, select Assigned to me.

Screenshot that shows selections of work on the Work Items page and choosing Assigned to me.

For more information, see:

Next steps