Riffle launches operational resilience app
- Riffle Resilience launched its operational-resilience app on the Atlassian Marketplace on May 1, alongside a strategic investment from Atlassian Ventures. (morningstar.com) - The app maps critical value streams, dependencies, systems, vendors, and risks inside Atlassian workflows, then turns that into recovery planning and incident activation. (marketplace.atlassian.com) - The bigger shift is continuity moving from static binders into live work systems, pushed by tougher outage lessons and resilience scrutiny. (apexassembly.com)
Operational resilience software is basically the stuff companies reach for when “have a plan” stops being enough. The real problem during an outage is rarely missing (morningstar.com)hed its app on the Atlassian Marketplace and said it also received backing from Atlassian Ventures. (morningstar.com)ent-from-atlassian-ventures)) ### What did Riffle actually launch? Riffle launched an Atlassian-native operational resilience application — no(apexassembly.com) already manage tickets, workflows, and incidents, so preparation and response happen inside normal operating systems instead of in static plans nobody opens until things are already bad. (riffleresilience.com) ### What does the app do? The app lets organizations map critical value streams and document the practical guts of operations — workflows, dependencies, systems, vendors, and operational risks. Then it turns that map into recovery planning and one-click incident activation, which is the important part. A lot of continuity tooling stops at documentation. Riffle is trying to push that into action. (marketplace.atlassian.com) ### Why build this inside Atlassian? Because disruptions do not send teams into some special resilience room. People work in Jira, Confluence, service desks, and incident queues. Riffle’s founders are arguing that if resilience lives natively in that stack, teams can align around the same live data and the same work objects during a crisis instead of transla(riffleresilience.com)t fixes a very real coordination failure. (markets.chroniclejournal.com) ### Why does the Atlassian Ventures piece matter? The money matters less as a financing headline than as a signal. (marketplace.atlassian.com)he broader Atlassian ecosystem. Riffle said the investment will fund more product development around AI and embedding resilience into day-to-day systems, which suggests this is being positioned as a platform layer, not a one-off compliance add-on. (morningstar.com) (markets.chroniclejournal.com)ies, and activate coordinated response from the same environment where work already happens. Think of the difference between a fire-escape diagram on the wall and a building with working alarms, unlocked exits, and people who know exactly where to go. (riffleresilience.com) ### Why is this showing up now? Because the market got a fresh reminder that single failures can cascade fast. A 2025 resilience survey found 94% of technical ex(morningstar.com)s exactly the opening for tools that promise to make resilience operational instead of theoretical. (apexassembly.com) ### Who is this really for? The language is broad, but the natural buyers are large organizations with cross-functional operations, regulatory pressure, or ugly outage histories — financial firms, healthcare systems, and other enterprises where downtime is not just inconvenient b(riffleresilience.com)ervices, including hospital downtime preparedness, which hints at where it sees urgent demand. (streetinsider.com) ### Bottom line The interesting part is not that another resilience vendor launched another app. It’s that resilience software (apexassembly.com)shelf and becomes part of how teams actually run through failure. (riffleresilience.com)