Create record links

Aha! Develop

Regardless of the size of your team or the complexity of your plans, you will come across portions of work that relate to or depend on each other. It can be incredibly useful to create links between Aha! records that allow your teammates to dig in for further context and to visualize these links in reports.

The following record types in your Aha! account can be linked to each other:

  • Epics

  • Features

  • Notes

Click any of the following links to skip ahead:

Create record links

  1. To create a record link, open the detail view for a record and click the More options menu in the upper-right corner.

  2. Click Link to another record to open the Record link modal.

  3. The Relates to dropdown gives you options for the type of record link you want to establish and the These <records> dropdown allows you to select the record type to search for in the Choose field.

  4. Begin typing a record's reference number or title, then select the record(s) from the search suggestions that you'd like to link. Click Create link.

Any record link you create from a record's Research tab will automatically have the link Has research in.

Top

Select a record relationship type

Your record link can be any one of eight relationship types.

  1. Relates to: This is the most generic relationship. When a record is related to another record in some way that's not easily defined by the other categories but you want to show that relationship, you can use Relates to.

  2. Depends on / is a dependency of: This is the most commonly used relationship. It states that one record must be completed before another can start.

  3. Duplicates / is Duplicated by: Occasionally, you may want to track duplicate work. For example, if you have two products and both will use the same feature, you may still need to track the feature in both teams. The work only happens once so you should create a primary feature where the work will be done and then create a second feature and link it to the primary. This helps you report on and keep track of the work.

  4. Contains / is contained by: If you are working on a record that will be part of another record, use this link to show the relationship. For example, you might be creating an alerting capability that's triggered by a report. You create the reporting capability in one feature but link it to the other feature for alerting capabilities.

  5. Impacts / is impacted by: This could represent a record whose work will ultimately impact the design of another record (but does not create a dependency). In this example, you may wish to hold off on your design until the first record's design is completed.

  6. Blocks / is blocked by: This could represent a record that completely blocks another record because until you complete the first, absolutely no work can take place on the second record. Another example is that this record uses a resource that you need — the development team's time, for example — and until it's completed, you are blocked. This relationship could be helpful in reporting tradeoffs you've made during the roadmapping process.

  7. Has research in: This record — note or whiteboard — was linked from a record's Research tab.

Once you have created a record link, you can see it on each record's Linked records section within the record's Related tab. Click one of the hyperlinks to see the detail drawer for the linked record.

If you have a Related tab with a lot of record links, it can be helpful to know those links' sort order:

  • Parent record types, sorted by each link's creation date

  • Child record types, sorted by each link's creation date

  • Record links that are Relates to and Depends on are kept separate.

The related tab on the epics details view

Configure the Related tab to make it easier to manage large projects. Access your custom layouts to configure the Related tab for a record.

Top

Visualize record links

Now that you have linked one or more records together, it is time to visualize them.

On the Related tab of your records, click Visualize. You will see an interactive dependency map that allows you to click into any of the linked records and expand or collapse the dependencies of records linked to yours.

Visualize does not appear for Belongs to relationships (e.g. if a feature belongs to an epic). It appears once you have linked records by selecting a record relationship type.

A dependency map showing links between records

Top

Report on record links

Reports help you analyze data, summarize progress, and chart trends.

  • Include key details about dependent work items. Use the [Record type] record links table in any list, pivot, or chart report. Then, add the Linked [record type] table and select any field (like Status, Assignee, or Due date) on the linked record's layout.

  • For a focused view of critical dependencies, filter these reports to show only records with Depends on/Dependency of relationships. You can also add information about manual and automatic risk indicators.

Save any of these visualizations to return to them later, and Share them with your team in Aha! presentations, as secure webpages, or as static images.

Top