If there’s one thing that our culture does not lack, it’s a litany of pithy catch-quotes meant to remind us to focus on the task at hand; yet, this often runs counter to our tendency to fixate on matters of the past and future.
While we are so often encouraged to “live in the moment” and “seize the day”, this is hardly an easy task, especially as related to any sort of emerging phenomenon that compels us to improve on historical missteps, and predict how things should change for the better.
Register today for the 3rd Annual DevOps Virtual Summit.
With the methodologies of agile and DevOps the tendency is, of course, to do the same, harping on the inefficiencies of previous software delivery models and painting an elaborate portrait of how related workflows are being transformed overnight.
The simple truth is that it’s easy to get excited about concepts that hold such tremendous potential in recasting an increasingly critical vital set of processes, and lose track of where things actually stand.
To note, while a recent research project published by Coleman Parkes found that over 80 percent of organizations have adopted some manner of agile and DevOps practices, and see them as critical in transforming their internal software factories, only a third have adopted the methods on a broad scale.
Point being, we’re still pretty early.
That said, we in the business of helping organizations adopt related culture and tooling have gone to great lengths to encourage everyone that this change should be pursued with dogged intensity. We have sliced and diced the data to illustrate how those organizations at the forefront of so-called digital transformation, enabled by agile and DevOps, are realizing the results in the form of increased velocity.
The same research finds that “advanced” adopters of the two concepts are, in fact, seeing significant improvement in time-to-market, customer satisfaction and new business growth.
But research is just that, and often not completely aligned with real-world scenarios. Someone who takes the time to answer a survey about such matters, one could reasonably expect, is the type of person far more likely to be involved in agile and DevOps activities.
My personal conversations with everyday practitioners [aka other parents on the sidelines at my kids’ sports and social events, many of whom work in IT] tell me that we’re much more oriented to the “pockets of innovation” phase at present, than any sense of pervasive adoption.
So this begs the two-part question – where do we really stand, and what do I really need to care about?
The only reliable source of record in my mind is the perspective of people already doing the work, beyond what I can discern amid basketball games and middle school theater. Real-world practitioners are the voices of reason that allow us to “be here now” and address the specifics of practical agile and DevOps implementation.
Over the past several years, I’ve found one of the best sources of such input to be the customer panels available at industry conferences and on webcasts. When it’s time for me to sit down and crank out some related content, I often go back to these recordings to remind myself where the rubber actually hits the road.
On Tuesday Mar. 7, we’ll host just such an event, the 3rd Annual DevOps Virtual Summit, where agile and DevOps leaders from organizations including CNN, GM Financial and United Airlines will share their thoughts on how this ongoing transformation is playing out, and where the remaining challenges lie.
Along with those experts, we’ll also hear from Dr. Nicole Forsgren, one of the leading researchers in the space who is in seemingly constant contact with people leading the charge and working in the trenches putting agile and DevOps into practice.
As a marketer, and previously as a journalist, everything that I know comes from direct interaction with those colleagues willing to share their hands-on experience garnered via doing this work every day.
Register for the event and join us to find out where agile and DevOps actually stand today.