Project Management

Why Disciplined DevOps?

From the Disciplined Agile Blog
by , , , , , ,
This blog contains details about various aspects of PMI's Disciplined Agile (DA) tool kit, including new and upcoming topics.

About this Blog

RSS

View Posts By:

Tatsiana Balshakova
Mark Lines
Mike Griffiths
James Trott
Bjorn Gustafsson
Curtis Hibbs
Scott Ambler

Past Contributors:

Joshua Barnes
Michael Richardson
Daniel Gagnon
Valentin Tudor Mocanu
Kashmir Birk
Glen Little
Klaus Boedker

Recent Posts

DA 5.6 is released

Disciplined Agile 5.5 Released

Choose Your WoW! Second Edition Is Now Available

Requisite Agility applied in Project Management

Disciplined Agile and PMBoK Guide 7th Edition

Categories

#ChoiceIsGood, #ChooseYourWoW, #ConsumableSolution, #ContinuousImprovement, #CoreAgilePractices, #experiment, #Experimentation, #GuidedContinuousImprovement, #Kaizen, #LifeCycles, #ProcessImprovement, #TealOrganizations, Adoption, agile, agile adoption, Agile Alliance, Agile Business Analyst, Agile certification, agile data, agile governance, agile lifecycle, agile metrics, agile principles, agile transformation, Agile2018, Agile2019, Agile20Reflect, AgileData, Analogy, announcement, Architecture, architecture, architecture owner, Articles and publications, Asset Management, Atari, Backlog, Barclays, being agile, benefits, bi, blades, book, Branching strategies, Browser, Business Agility, business intelligence, business operations, capex, Case Study, Certification, certification, charity, Choose your WoW, CMMI, cmmi, Coaching, Collaboration, Communications Management, Compliance, Compliancy, Conference, Construction, Construction phase, Context, Continuous Improvement, coordination, COVID-19, Culture, culture, Cutter, DA, DAD, DAD Book, DAD discussions, DAD press, DAD roles, DAD supporters, DAD webcast, DADay2019, Data Management, database, dependencies, Deployment, Development Strategies, DevOps, disaster, Discipline, discipline, Disciplined Agile, disciplined agile delivery, disciplined agile delivery blog, Disciplined Agile Enterprise, disciplined devops, Documentation, Domain complexity, dw, DW/BI, Energy Healing, Enterprise Agile, Enterprise Architecture, Enterprise Awareness, enterprise awareness, Essence, estimation, Evolving DA, Executive, Experiment, facilitation, FailureBow, feedback-cycle, finance, Financial, FLEX, Flow, foundation layer, Funding, GCI, GDD, Geographic Distribution, gladwell, global development, Goal-Driven, goal-driven, goals, Governance, GQM, Guideline, Hybrid, Improvement, inception, Inception phase, India, information technology, infosec, Introduction, iterations, Kanban, large teams, layer, lean, Lean Startup, learning, Legal Project Management, LeSS, Lifecycle, lifecycle, Manifesto, mark lines, marketing, MBI, Metaphor, Metrics, metrics, mindset, Miscellaneous, MVP, News, News and events, Non-Functional Requirements, non-functional requirements, Non-solo development, offshoring, Operations, opex, Organization, Outsourcing, outsourcing, paired programming, pairing, paper, People, People Management, phases, Philosophies, Planning, PMBoK, PMI, PMI and DA, PMI Chapter, Portfolio Management, post-format-quote, Practices, practices, Principle, Process, process improvement, process tailoring, Product Management, product owner, Product Owners, productivity, Program Management, Project Management, project-initiation, Promise, Quality, quality, rational unified process, Refactoring, Reiki, Release Management, release management, Remote Training, Remote Work, repeatability, requirements, Requirements Management, research&development, responsibilities, retrospectives, Reuse, Reuse Engineering, ride for heart, rights, Risk Management, Risk Management, Risk management, Roles, RUP, SAFe, sales, Scaling, scaling, scaling agile, Scheduled Workshops, SCM, scorecard, Scrum, ScrumMaster, SDLC, Security, security, self-organization, SEMAT, serial, skill, solutions software consumable shippable, Stakeholder Management, strategy, Support, Surveys, Teal organizations, team development, Team Lead, team lead, Teams, Technical Debt, Teleconferencing, Terminology, terraforming, test strategy, testing, time tracking, Tool kit, Toolkit, tools, traditional, Transformation, Transition iteration, transition phase, Uncategorized, Upmentors, Using PMI Standards, value stream, velocity, vendor management, Virtual Training, Workflow, workflow, workspaces

Date

linkedin twitter facebook Request to reuse this  

Categories: agile, benefits, DevOps, Kanban, lean, Scrum


In this posting we briefly explore why both you and your organization should consider adopting a Disciplined DevOps mindset.  For yourself as an individual there are several interesting benefits.  First, you become more productive as an IT professional, increasing your chance at promotion and making you more attractive in the marketplace.  Second, you are in a position where you can focus on interesting, value-added work, which should lead to greater job satisfaction for you.  Third, much of the dysfunctional politics exhibited in traditional IT  organizations is effectively squeezed out as you move to a Disciplined DevOps mindset, making your work environment a more enjoyable place to be.

There are many reasons why your organization should consider adopting a Disciplined DevOps mindset.  The following table summarizes the potential benefits and how they are achieved:

Benefit Source
Decreased time to market
  • Shorter Transition efforts from automation
  • Smaller “chunks” of work can be implemented faster
Decreased cost to deploy
  • Automated regression testing
  • Automated deployment
  • Streamlined release management
Improved mean time between deployments
  • Practices such as Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery enable teams to deploy more often
  • Decreased cost to deploy enables teams to deploy more often
Improved quality
  • Adoption of agile testing and quality techniques such as automated regression testing, refactoring, independent testing, and many others
  • Agile and lean strategies are applied to enterprise architecture, enabling a more holistic view of the organization which in turn promotes greater reuse and reduction/avoidance of technical debt
  • Agile and lean strategies are applied to data management, improving overall data quality across your organization
Improved market competitiveness
  • Agile/lean teams enjoy greater stakeholder satisfaction, on average, compared to traditional teams
  • Streamlined operations and support provide better overall service to end users
  • Improved quality
  • Improved mean time between deployments
  • Decreased time to market
Improved decision-making
  • Real-time insight from Development Intelligence strategies
  • Real-time insight from Operational Intelligence strategies
  • Shorter feedback cycles provided by decreased time to market enable teams to easily run experiments to discover what their stakeholders actually want

As always, we welcome any feedback that you may have.


Posted by Scott Ambler on: April 08, 2015 10:23 AM | Permalink

Comments (0)

Please login or join to subscribe to this item


Please Login/Register to leave a comment.

ADVERTISEMENTS

"Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please."

- Mark Twain

ADVERTISEMENT

Sponsors