ToolStack
Migration Guide

Migrating from Confluence to Wrike

Wrike fits scaleup and enterprise teams best and has a moderate learning curve. If you're moving from Confluence, the first week is the hardest — new UI, different terminology, rebuilt automations. This guide compresses that learning curve with a step-by-step migration plan.

At a Glance

Confluence
4.1/5 · 3,600 G2 reviews
  • Deep native integration with Jira makes it the de facto documentation tool for teams already using Atlassian — Jira issues embed seamlessly in pages
  • Extensive template library with 100+ templates for PRDs, meeting notes, retrospectives, decision logs, and more — accelerates team onboarding
  • Real-time collaborative editing with inline comments, @mentions, and page watching enables asynchronous team communication at scale
Wrike
4.2/5 · 4,500 G2 reviews
  • Extremely versatile work management platform — supports Gantt, Kanban, table, calendar, and workload views in a single workspace
  • Powerful resource management and workload balancing with real-time capacity insights (Business plan and above)
  • Built-in proofing and approval workflows for creative assets — images, videos, PDFs — making it ideal for marketing and creative teams
Full side-by-side comparison: Confluence vs Wrike

You gain with Wrike

  • +Kanban boards
  • +Gantt charts
  • +time tracking
  • +custom fields

Migration Steps

1

Audit and export your current workspace

Before touching Wrike, document what lives in Confluence: projects and tasks, custom fields, automations, integrations, and team permissions. Export a full CSV backup — most tools support this from Settings → Export. Pay particular attention to any workflow automations that your team relies on daily.

2

Set up your Wrike workspace

Create your Wrike workspace and replicate your project structure using tasks and projects. Wrike starts at $9.8/user/mo/user/mo with a free tier available — budget $3.750000000000001/user/mo more per user. Run with a single pilot team before migrating everyone.

3

Map your workflow equivalents

Find the closest Wrike equivalent for each Confluence feature your team relies on. projects and tasks in Confluence maps to tasks and projects in Wrike. Wrike supports custom fields — recreate your Confluence field schema here first. Gantt-style timeline views are available if your team used them in Confluence. Prioritise the critical path: task creation, status tracking, and assignment.

4

Import your data

Wrike supports CSV import for tasks and projects and has 20+ native integrations. After importing, rebuild your key automations — Wrike's automation engine can replicate most rules you had in Confluence. Start with your most active project rather than importing everything at once.

5

Onboard your team

Run a 30-minute walkthrough covering the daily workflow: how to create tasks and projects, update status, and find your board. Expect a moderate ramp — most engineers and PMs hit their stride within a week. The biggest adjustment is usually the project hierarchy.

6

Run Confluence in parallel for two weeks

Keep Confluence read-only while your team works primarily in Wrike. This reduces risk and lets people reference historical context — old decisions, archived tickets, past sprint data — without slowing the migration. After two weeks with no new work going into Confluence, archive the workspace and make Wrike the official home.

Ready to switch?

Read the full Wrike review for pricing, integrations, and team fit details.

Read Wrike Review →Compare Confluence vs Wrike