Since the book Team Topologies was published in 2019, organizations around the world have started to adopt Team Topologies principles and practices like Stream-aligned teams, modern platforms, well-defined team interactions, and team cognitive load as a key driver for fast software delivery and operations.
We will look at examples from these organizations:
Gjensidige Insurance, a leading Nordic insurance company with 4000 employees and business in the Nordic and Baltic countries, uses the four fundamental team types to clarify team responsibilities and interactions and is moving towards several “thinnest viable platforms” with Stream-aligned teams as internal customers
PureGym is Britain’s largest gym chain - the first to gain over 1 million members. As PureGym expanded, so did the need for software to enable their members to book and manage gym sessions. Since 2019, PureGym has re-aligned its teams and team interactions based on Team Topologies patterns, helping to scale the engineering teams and improve flow.
uSwitch / RVU, one of the UK’s leading consumer price comparison websites, has grown a modern platform from scratch, allowing stream-aligned teams to focus on consumers needs, offloading infrastructure provisioning concerns to the platform which also provides cross-cutting services around scalability, security and data management
Visma is one of the leading software development companies in Europe with nearly 1 million customers in 21 countries. Team Topologies has helped to define and accelerate a transformation begun in 2015 to improve service ownership and speed of changes.
Wealth Wizards is a UK company making financial advice affordable and accessible to everyone through online tools and apps. The engineering division at Wealth Wizards has used the Team Topologies ideas around team cognitive load to help right-size their teams and align teams to the most important flows of business change.
For each of these examples, we explore how the ideas and patterns in Team Topologies were useful to the organization and the results of the changes.
Remote-First Team Interactions for Business and Technology Teams @ Lean-Agile...Manuel Pais
Remote-first work is the ”new normal” for around the world. There is no shortage of advice on how individual teams can bond and work effectively remotely.
However, there is not much on how to address remote interactions between different teams that need to collaborate remotely, as part of the same value stream. Moving from the physical to the online world can further expose pre-existing interaction problems, increase wait times and slow down delivery and possibly response to incidents.
Based on the ideas from “Team Topologies” book, Manuel Pais presents some useful approaches that clarify and evolve inter-team interactions and communication in this remote-first world.
Designing "Team APIs" and virtual communication channels that promote relevant team interactions while minimizing communication overhead helps organizations keep a fast flow of delivery.
Following well-defined interaction patterns and architecting for team-first software boundaries will also help reduce communication overhead, clarify expectations on teams, and increase visibility of on-going work and support.
Team Topologies in action - early results from industry - DOES London Virtual...Matthew Skelton
A talk given at DevOps Enterprise Summit Virtual 2020
---
Since the book Team Topologies was published in 2019, organizations around the world have started to adopt Team Topologies principles and practices like Stream-aligned teams, modern platforms, well-defined team interactions, and team cognitive load as a key driver for fast software delivery and operations.
We will look at examples from these organizations:
* Gjensidige Insurance, a leading Nordic insurance company with 4000 employees and business in the Nordic and Baltic countries, uses the four fundamental team types to clarify team responsibilities and interactions and is moving towards several “thinnest viable platforms” with Stream-aligned teams as internal customers
* PureGym is Britain’s largest gym chain - the first to gain over 1 million members. As PureGym expanded, so did the need for software to enable their members to book and manage gym sessions. Since 2019, PureGym has re-aligned its teams and team interactions based on Team Topologies patterns, helping to scale the engineering teams and improve flow.
* uSwitch / RVU, one of the UK’s leading consumer price comparison websites, has grown a modern platform from scratch, allowing stream-aligned teams to focus on consumers needs, offloading infrastructure provisioning concerns to the platform which also provides cross-cutting services around scalability, security and data management
* Visma is one of the leading software development companies in Europe with nearly 1 million customers in 21 countries. Team Topologies has helped to define and accelerate a transformation begun in 2015 to improve service ownership and speed of changes.
* Wealth Wizards is a UK company making financial advice affordable and accessible to everyone through online tools and apps. The engineering division at Wealth Wizards has used the Team Topologies ideas around team cognitive load to help right-size their teams and align teams to the most important flows of business change.
For each of these examples, we explore how the ideas and patterns in Team Topologies were useful to the organization and the results of the changes.
Product Teams Need a Family Too! @ Enterprise Agile San Francisco meetup, Jul...Manuel Pais
Autonomous product teams are key to sustainable software delivery. But what does autonomy really mean? Do we expect the team to set up CI/CD, automate infra, test/UX all the things, and, of course, run and monitor their product? And still, deliver features? Four fundamental team topologies and three interaction modes can help reduce the cognitive load on product teams.
So you’re trying to move from agile project teams to business-aligned product teams. Everyone from the CEO to middle management is on board. Yet somehow it’s not that easy, is it? You’ve just about figured out how to split infrastructure responsibilities between teams when the next great tech for cost-effective scalability is out there and it doesn’t fit in the new model. Oh, and let’s not forget that products X and Y have no automated tests since they were developed by temporary project teams.
The underlying questions are: What are the product team’s responsibilities? How do they interact with other teams and when? The fundamental team topologies provide a framework for thinking about and aligning teams with an expected set of behaviors and responsibilities. In other words, we are clarifying their purpose and ways of working.
We recommend four fundamental team topologies, each with a well-defined purpose and responsibilities. Along with stream-aligned teams (of which product teams are a subset), the other three topologies recommended are platform, enabling, and complicated subsystem. This family of topologies provides the support system necessary for product teams to thrive.
In this discussion, we will see what each of these topologies brings to the table and how they enable organizations to quickly evolve and respond to both new technology and business requirements over time.
This talk draws on research and case studies from the book Team Topologies by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais (IT Revolution Press, 2019) together with first-hand consulting experience from the authors with organizations around the world. Team Topologies are the evolution of the highly praised DevOps Topologies, focusing on an evolutionary approach for organization design.
Manuel Pais is co-author of Team Topologies: organizing business and technology teams for fast flow. Recognized by TechBeacon as a DevOps thought leader, Manuel is an independent IT organizational consultant and trainer, focused on team interactions, delivery practices, and accelerating flow. Manuel is also a LinkedIn instructor on Accelerating Continuous Delivery in the Enterprise.
Avoiding the CI/CD Monolith with Team Design & Evolution @ London CD meetup, ...Manuel Pais
We often talk about monoliths at the application and database level. However, there are many other manifestations: monolithic tooling, monolithic infrastructure, monolithic releases, monolithic testing, and even monolithic thinking.
In my experience, more than legacy technology or architecture, the emergence of monoliths often comes down to a lack of purposeful team design and evolution. Conway’s Law - the mirroring effect between team structures and dependencies and the resulting system design - is no stranger to CI/CD. Once we acknowledge the socio-technical nature of software delivery, we consequently recognize the need for a team-centric, not tool-centric, approach for sustainable CI/CD.
We start asking questions like: should every application team own and maintain their own instances and flavors of the CI/CD tooling (since it’s all codifiable now, right)? Or do we need a CI/CD team to handle the tooling and infrastructure for everyone else in the org so teams only have to worry about their own pipelines? Or something in between, like a CI/CD platform providing out-of-the-box solutions that can be customized by application teams to fit their specific needs?
Just like we are advancing our tools to become easier to install, run and update, we also need to think about clarifying team interactions and responsibility boundaries for effective ownership and evolution of both the CI/CD system (it’s actually a product) and the application pipelines.
Manuel Pais is co-author of Team Topologies: organizing business and technology teams for fast flow. Recognized by TechBeacon as a DevOps thought leader, Manuel is an independent IT organizational consultant and trainer, focused on team interactions, delivery practices and accelerating flow.
Remote-first Team Interactions for Business and Technology Teams @ DevOps Not...Manuel Pais
Remote-first work is the "new normal" for companies around the world. There is no shortage of advice on how individual teams can bond and work effectively remotely.
However, there's not much out there on how to address remote interactions between different teams that need to collaborate remotely, as part of the same value stream. Moving from the physical to the online world can further expose pre-existing interaction problems, increase wait times and slow down delivery, and possibly response to incidents.
Based on the ideas from Team Topologies, Manuel Pais will present some useful approaches to clarify and evolve inter-team interactions and communication in this remote-first world.
Designing Team APIs and virtual communication channels that promote relevant team interactions while minimizing communication overhead will help modern organizations keep a fast flow of delivery once they're past the initial adaptation to teleworking.
Following well-defined interaction patterns and architecting for team-first software boundaries will also help reduce communication overhead, clarify expectations on teams, and increase visibility of on-going work and support.
Kubernetes Is Not Your Platform, It's Just the Foundation @ Tech Community Da...Manuel Pais
Regardless of all the technical benefits that Kubernetes undoubtedly brings, team interactions are still key for successfully delivering and running services. We will look at a couple of organizations that have succeeded by focusing on reducing the cognitive load for application teams.
Successful Kubernetes adoption requires thinking about what a platform really means and learning which team structures and interactions work well. And evolve them over time.
Conway's Law Is Out to Get You! @ #PMOwfh meetup, May 2020Manuel Pais
Wednesday 20th May: We'll be looking at Conway's Law with Manuel Pais, Co-Author of 'Team Topologies: Organizing business and technology teams for fast flow'.
In this informative and enlightening session, we'll be exploring how you can use exploit Conway's law and use it to your advantage. We'll also be looking at how communication structures, cognitive load, and alignment all play a crucial role in accelerating delivery and enabling delivery teams.
Remote first team interactions with Team Topologies - IT Revolution webinar -...Matthew Skelton
From a webinar run by IT Revolution Press on 29 April 2020.
Remote-first work is the "new normal" for companies around the world. There is no shortage of advice on how individual teams can bond and work effectively remotely.
However, there is not much on how to address remote interactions between different teams that need to collaborate remotely, as part of the same value stream. Moving from the physical to the online world can further expose pre-existing interaction problems, increase wait times and slow down delivery and possibly response to incidents.
Based on the ideas from Team Topologies, Manuel Pais and Matthew Skelton will present some useful approaches to clarify and evolve inter-team interactions and communication in this remote-first world.
Designing Team APIs and virtual communication channels that promote relevant team interactions while minimizing communication overhead will help modern organizations keep a fast flow of delivery once they're past the initial adaptation to teleworking.
Following well-defined interaction patterns and architecting for team-first software boundaries will also help reduce communication overhead, clarify expectations on teams, and increase visibility of on-going work and support.
Remote-First Team Interactions for Business and Technology Teams @ Lean-Agile...Manuel Pais
Remote-first work is the ”new normal” for around the world. There is no shortage of advice on how individual teams can bond and work effectively remotely.
However, there is not much on how to address remote interactions between different teams that need to collaborate remotely, as part of the same value stream. Moving from the physical to the online world can further expose pre-existing interaction problems, increase wait times and slow down delivery and possibly response to incidents.
Based on the ideas from “Team Topologies” book, Manuel Pais presents some useful approaches that clarify and evolve inter-team interactions and communication in this remote-first world.
Designing "Team APIs" and virtual communication channels that promote relevant team interactions while minimizing communication overhead helps organizations keep a fast flow of delivery.
Following well-defined interaction patterns and architecting for team-first software boundaries will also help reduce communication overhead, clarify expectations on teams, and increase visibility of on-going work and support.
Team Topologies in action - early results from industry - DOES London Virtual...Matthew Skelton
A talk given at DevOps Enterprise Summit Virtual 2020
---
Since the book Team Topologies was published in 2019, organizations around the world have started to adopt Team Topologies principles and practices like Stream-aligned teams, modern platforms, well-defined team interactions, and team cognitive load as a key driver for fast software delivery and operations.
We will look at examples from these organizations:
* Gjensidige Insurance, a leading Nordic insurance company with 4000 employees and business in the Nordic and Baltic countries, uses the four fundamental team types to clarify team responsibilities and interactions and is moving towards several “thinnest viable platforms” with Stream-aligned teams as internal customers
* PureGym is Britain’s largest gym chain - the first to gain over 1 million members. As PureGym expanded, so did the need for software to enable their members to book and manage gym sessions. Since 2019, PureGym has re-aligned its teams and team interactions based on Team Topologies patterns, helping to scale the engineering teams and improve flow.
* uSwitch / RVU, one of the UK’s leading consumer price comparison websites, has grown a modern platform from scratch, allowing stream-aligned teams to focus on consumers needs, offloading infrastructure provisioning concerns to the platform which also provides cross-cutting services around scalability, security and data management
* Visma is one of the leading software development companies in Europe with nearly 1 million customers in 21 countries. Team Topologies has helped to define and accelerate a transformation begun in 2015 to improve service ownership and speed of changes.
* Wealth Wizards is a UK company making financial advice affordable and accessible to everyone through online tools and apps. The engineering division at Wealth Wizards has used the Team Topologies ideas around team cognitive load to help right-size their teams and align teams to the most important flows of business change.
For each of these examples, we explore how the ideas and patterns in Team Topologies were useful to the organization and the results of the changes.
Product Teams Need a Family Too! @ Enterprise Agile San Francisco meetup, Jul...Manuel Pais
Autonomous product teams are key to sustainable software delivery. But what does autonomy really mean? Do we expect the team to set up CI/CD, automate infra, test/UX all the things, and, of course, run and monitor their product? And still, deliver features? Four fundamental team topologies and three interaction modes can help reduce the cognitive load on product teams.
So you’re trying to move from agile project teams to business-aligned product teams. Everyone from the CEO to middle management is on board. Yet somehow it’s not that easy, is it? You’ve just about figured out how to split infrastructure responsibilities between teams when the next great tech for cost-effective scalability is out there and it doesn’t fit in the new model. Oh, and let’s not forget that products X and Y have no automated tests since they were developed by temporary project teams.
The underlying questions are: What are the product team’s responsibilities? How do they interact with other teams and when? The fundamental team topologies provide a framework for thinking about and aligning teams with an expected set of behaviors and responsibilities. In other words, we are clarifying their purpose and ways of working.
We recommend four fundamental team topologies, each with a well-defined purpose and responsibilities. Along with stream-aligned teams (of which product teams are a subset), the other three topologies recommended are platform, enabling, and complicated subsystem. This family of topologies provides the support system necessary for product teams to thrive.
In this discussion, we will see what each of these topologies brings to the table and how they enable organizations to quickly evolve and respond to both new technology and business requirements over time.
This talk draws on research and case studies from the book Team Topologies by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais (IT Revolution Press, 2019) together with first-hand consulting experience from the authors with organizations around the world. Team Topologies are the evolution of the highly praised DevOps Topologies, focusing on an evolutionary approach for organization design.
Manuel Pais is co-author of Team Topologies: organizing business and technology teams for fast flow. Recognized by TechBeacon as a DevOps thought leader, Manuel is an independent IT organizational consultant and trainer, focused on team interactions, delivery practices, and accelerating flow. Manuel is also a LinkedIn instructor on Accelerating Continuous Delivery in the Enterprise.
Avoiding the CI/CD Monolith with Team Design & Evolution @ London CD meetup, ...Manuel Pais
We often talk about monoliths at the application and database level. However, there are many other manifestations: monolithic tooling, monolithic infrastructure, monolithic releases, monolithic testing, and even monolithic thinking.
In my experience, more than legacy technology or architecture, the emergence of monoliths often comes down to a lack of purposeful team design and evolution. Conway’s Law - the mirroring effect between team structures and dependencies and the resulting system design - is no stranger to CI/CD. Once we acknowledge the socio-technical nature of software delivery, we consequently recognize the need for a team-centric, not tool-centric, approach for sustainable CI/CD.
We start asking questions like: should every application team own and maintain their own instances and flavors of the CI/CD tooling (since it’s all codifiable now, right)? Or do we need a CI/CD team to handle the tooling and infrastructure for everyone else in the org so teams only have to worry about their own pipelines? Or something in between, like a CI/CD platform providing out-of-the-box solutions that can be customized by application teams to fit their specific needs?
Just like we are advancing our tools to become easier to install, run and update, we also need to think about clarifying team interactions and responsibility boundaries for effective ownership and evolution of both the CI/CD system (it’s actually a product) and the application pipelines.
Manuel Pais is co-author of Team Topologies: organizing business and technology teams for fast flow. Recognized by TechBeacon as a DevOps thought leader, Manuel is an independent IT organizational consultant and trainer, focused on team interactions, delivery practices and accelerating flow.
Remote-first Team Interactions for Business and Technology Teams @ DevOps Not...Manuel Pais
Remote-first work is the "new normal" for companies around the world. There is no shortage of advice on how individual teams can bond and work effectively remotely.
However, there's not much out there on how to address remote interactions between different teams that need to collaborate remotely, as part of the same value stream. Moving from the physical to the online world can further expose pre-existing interaction problems, increase wait times and slow down delivery, and possibly response to incidents.
Based on the ideas from Team Topologies, Manuel Pais will present some useful approaches to clarify and evolve inter-team interactions and communication in this remote-first world.
Designing Team APIs and virtual communication channels that promote relevant team interactions while minimizing communication overhead will help modern organizations keep a fast flow of delivery once they're past the initial adaptation to teleworking.
Following well-defined interaction patterns and architecting for team-first software boundaries will also help reduce communication overhead, clarify expectations on teams, and increase visibility of on-going work and support.
Kubernetes Is Not Your Platform, It's Just the Foundation @ Tech Community Da...Manuel Pais
Regardless of all the technical benefits that Kubernetes undoubtedly brings, team interactions are still key for successfully delivering and running services. We will look at a couple of organizations that have succeeded by focusing on reducing the cognitive load for application teams.
Successful Kubernetes adoption requires thinking about what a platform really means and learning which team structures and interactions work well. And evolve them over time.
Conway's Law Is Out to Get You! @ #PMOwfh meetup, May 2020Manuel Pais
Wednesday 20th May: We'll be looking at Conway's Law with Manuel Pais, Co-Author of 'Team Topologies: Organizing business and technology teams for fast flow'.
In this informative and enlightening session, we'll be exploring how you can use exploit Conway's law and use it to your advantage. We'll also be looking at how communication structures, cognitive load, and alignment all play a crucial role in accelerating delivery and enabling delivery teams.
Remote first team interactions with Team Topologies - IT Revolution webinar -...Matthew Skelton
From a webinar run by IT Revolution Press on 29 April 2020.
Remote-first work is the "new normal" for companies around the world. There is no shortage of advice on how individual teams can bond and work effectively remotely.
However, there is not much on how to address remote interactions between different teams that need to collaborate remotely, as part of the same value stream. Moving from the physical to the online world can further expose pre-existing interaction problems, increase wait times and slow down delivery and possibly response to incidents.
Based on the ideas from Team Topologies, Manuel Pais and Matthew Skelton will present some useful approaches to clarify and evolve inter-team interactions and communication in this remote-first world.
Designing Team APIs and virtual communication channels that promote relevant team interactions while minimizing communication overhead will help modern organizations keep a fast flow of delivery once they're past the initial adaptation to teleworking.
Following well-defined interaction patterns and architecting for team-first software boundaries will also help reduce communication overhead, clarify expectations on teams, and increase visibility of on-going work and support.
Business and technical agility with Team Topologies - QCon Plus - 2021-05-26Matthew Skelton
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business and technical environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation, pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, cloud-native, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business and technical agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business and technical agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and an awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business and technical agility.
From a talk at QCon Plus on 2021-05-26
Business and Technical Agility with Team Topologies, Jun 2021Manuel Pais
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business and technical environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation,
pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, cloud-native, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business and technical agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business and technical agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business and technical agility.
Continuous Delivery at scale - Matthew Skelton - NHS Digital agile CoP - Marc...Matthew Skelton
Continuous Delivery practices have increasingly become “table stakes” for effective software delivery since the publication of the book Continuous Delivery by Jez Humble and Dave Farley in 2010. The combination of sound technical practices and a scientific approach to testing and feature development has led to significant success with software delivery with organisations around the world.
However, in large organisations with many teams and many different suppliers, there are also many ideas about what Continuous Delivery is. This variety of approaches and assumptions can lead to conflicts around deployments, testing, releasing, and operations, resulting in a macro-level sub-optimal flow of change.
In this talk, Matthew Skelton will share some insights from his time spent as Engineering Lead at a large GOV.UK department during most of 2018. There he championed Continuous Delivery practices across 70+ teams and 7 locations, helping to raise standards for software operability, Developer Experience (DevEx), testing, deployments, and inter-team communications. He will share some practical techniques for getting Continuous Delivery working at scale.
Forget monoliths vs microservices - focus on team cognitive load - Team Topol...Matthew Skelton
The “monoliths vs microservices” debate often focuses on technological aspects, ignoring strategy and team dynamics. Instead of technology, smart-thinking organizations are beginning with team cognitive load as the guiding principle for modern software. In this talk we explain how and why, based on material from the book Team Topologies by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais.
Forget monoliths vs microservices - focus on team cognitive load - Team Topol...Conflux
The “monoliths vs microservices” debate often focuses on technological aspects, ignoring strategy and team dynamics. Instead of technology, smart-thinking organizations are beginning with team cognitive load as the guiding principle for modern software. In this talk we explain how and why, based on material from the book Team Topologies by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais.
From a talk by Matthew Skelton of Conflux at NAV, Oslo on 2020-01-23
Team Topologies in action - early results from industry - DOES Las Vegas 2020...Matthew Skelton
Since the book Team Topologies was published in 2019, organizations around the world have started to adopt Team Topologies principles and practices like Stream-aligned teams, modern platforms, well-defined team interactions, and team cognitive load as a key driver for fast software delivery and operations.
We will look at examples from these organizations:
- Footasylum gives fashion-focused youth a multi-branded retail experience mixing global sportswear household names with emerging brands and its own stable of in-house labels. Founded in 2005, Footasylum now has 70 stores across the UK and a thriving ecommerce platform, with revenue of £260m per annum and over 2500 employees. Footasylum used Team Topologies patterns to revolutionize their ecommerce platform.
- PureGym is Britain’s largest gym chain - the first to gain over 1 million members. As PureGym expanded, so did the need for software to enable their members to book and manage gym sessions. Since 2019, PureGym has re-aligned its teams and team interactions based on Team Topologies patterns, helping to scale the engineering teams and improve flow.
- uSwitch / RVU, one of the UK’s leading consumer price comparison websites, has grown a modern platform from scratch, allowing stream-aligned teams to focus on consumers needs, offloading infrastructure provisioning concerns to the platform which also provides cross-cutting services around scalability, security and data management
- Wealth Wizards is a UK company making financial advice affordable and accessible to everyone through online tools and apps. The engineering division at Wealth Wizards has used the Team Topologies ideas around team cognitive load to help right-size their teams and align teams to the most important flows of business change.
For each of these examples, we explore how the ideas and patterns in Team Topologies were useful to the organization and the results of the changes.
Business Agility with Team Topologies @ Digital Transformation London meetup,...Manuel Pais
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business and technical environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation, pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, cloud-native, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business and technical agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business and technical agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and an awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business and technical agility.
Manuel Pais is co-author of Team Topologies: organizing business and technology teams for fast flow. Recognized by TechBeacon as a DevOps thought leader, Manuel is an independent IT organizational consultant and trainer, focused on team interactions, delivery practices and accelerating flow. Manuel is also a LinkedIn instructor on Accelerating Continuous Delivery in the Enterprise.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/manuelpais/
Beyond the Spotify Model - Team Topologies - Tech.rocks - 2020-12-10 - Matthe...Matthew Skelton
From a talk at Tech.Rocks 2020
For effective, modern, cloud-connected software systems we need to organize our teams in certain ways. Taking account of Conway’s Law, we look to match the team structures to the required software architecture, enabling or restricting communication and collaboration for the best outcomes.
This talk will cover the basics of organization design using Team Topologies, exploring a selection of key team types, and how and when to use them in order to make the development and operation of your software systems as effective as possible. The talk is based on the book Team Topologies by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais including first-hand experience helping companies around the world with the design of their technology teams.
Key takeaways:
1. Why using the “Spotify Model” of team design is not enough
2. The four fundamental team topologies needed for modern software delivery
3. The three team interaction modes that enable fast flow and rapid learning
4. How to address Conway’s Law, cognitive load, and team evolution with Team Topologies
Accidental Architects - how HR designs software systems - Team Topologies - e...Matthew Skelton
Who designs the architecture of your software systems? Conway's Law suggests that HR may be strongly shaping software architecture by deciding how teams are composed and interrelate. Do you want HR designing your software architecture?
Organization architecture and software system architecture need to be co-designed to avoid friction from Conway's Law.
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From a talk given by Matthew Skelton at Elabor8- 2020-05-27
Business and Technical Agility with Team Topologies @ WTF Is Cloud Native, No...Manuel Pais
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business and technical environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation, pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, cloud-native, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business and technical agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business and technical agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and an awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business and technical agility.
What is platform as a product? Clues from Team Topologies - Puppetize 2020 - ...Matthew Skelton
Savvy organisations are discovering the value of treating their internal platforms as products. But what does it mean to treat a “platform as a product”? What benefits does this give, and why would an organisation adopt this approach?
In this talk, [Matthew Skelton] [Manuel Pais], co-author of the book Team Topologies, explains why the platform-as-product approach can be a game-changer for organisations building and running software-enabled products and services. Using ideas & patterns from Team Topologies - including Thinnest Viable Platform, team cognitive load, and the evolutionary team interaction modes - [Matthew] [Manuel] explains how organisations like adidas and Uswitch have successfully used the platform-as-product model to accelerate and simplify the delivery of software at scale.
Playing Tetris with Cognitive Load @ Craft Conference, Jun 2021Manuel Pais
Autonomous empowered cross-functional product teams. Sounds like a dream team, doesn’t it? So what does this mean for software delivery teams? Do we expect such a team to set up their CI/CD tooling and pipelines, automate infra, test and secure *all the things*, and, of course, run and monitor their product live? Oh wait, there’s more: they need to actually understand who their customers are, what they need from the product, what is causing friction, and what is the viability of our product as a net positive for the organization. Sounds familiar? Congratulations, you’re already playing Tetris with cognitive load! Want to know more about team cognitive load and how we can make use of effective team topologies and interactions to balance and minimize the cognitive load across an ecosystem of teams. Join this talk and climb up the cognitive load Tetris ranking with the help of one of the co-authors of the book Team Topologies: Organizing Business and Technology Teams for Fast Flow!
What is platform as a product? Clues from Team Topologies - WTFinar with Cont...Matthew Skelton
From a webinar on 29 April 2021
https://info.container-solutions.com/wtf-is-platform-as-product-2nd-edition
Savvy organisations are discovering the value of treating their internal platforms as products. But what does it mean to treat a “platform as a product”? What benefits does this give, and why would an organisation adopt this approach?
In this talk, [Matthew Skelton] [Manuel Pais], co-author of the book Team Topologies, explains why the platform-as-product approach can be a game-changer for organisations building and running software-enabled products and services. Using ideas & patterns from Team Topologies - including Thinnest Viable Platform, team cognitive load, and the evolutionary team interaction modes - [Matthew] [Manuel] explains how organisations like adidas and Uswitch have successfully used the platform-as-product model to accelerate and simplify the delivery of software at scale.
How to choose tools for DevOps and Continuous Delivery - #doxlonMatthew Skelton
With an ever-increasing array of tools and technologies claiming to 'enable DevOps', how do we know which tools to try or to choose? In-house, open source, or commercial? Ruby or shell? Dedicated or plugins? It transpires that highly collaborative practices such as DevOps and Continuous Delivery require new ways of assessing tools and technologies in order to avoid creating new silos. Matthew Skelton shares his recent experience of helping many different organisations to evaluate and select tools to facilitate DevOps; the recommendations may surprise you.
A talk given at DevOps Exchange (#doxlon) meetup group on 24th July 2014: http://www.meetup.com/DevOps-Exchange-London/events/194288152/
Business agility with Team Topologies - NatWest Group - 2021-01-19Matthew Skelton
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation, pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and an awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business agility.
Matthew Skelton, co-author of Team Topologies, shares insights from organizations in several different industry sectors including banking, financial services, insurance, retail, and leisure.
Monoliths vs Microservices is the Wrong Question; Start with Team Cognitive L...Manuel Pais
The “monoliths vs microservices” debate often focuses on technological aspects, ignoring strategy and team dynamics. Instead of technology, smart-thinking organizations are beginning with team cognitive load as the guiding principle for modern software. In this talk I explain how and why.
Key takeaways:
- What is team cognitive load and why that matters
- Using team cognitive load as the guiding principle for sustainable ownership and evolution of software systems
- What are the fundamental topologies and interaction modes that help reduce cognitive load
The People Pillar of Cloud Adoption: Developing Your Workforce & Building Dig...Amazon Web Services
A successful cloud-transformation journey incorporates three pillars: people, process, and technology. Far too often, organisations focus on process improvements and technology implementation, but ignore the human aspect. Many leaders acknowledge that the first two are easy to modify, while influencing culture is more difficult. This session covers best-practice methods meant to empower customers to address this challenge. Learn about roles and responsibilities germane to the transition and post-cloud adoption phase. Assess your organisation’s gaps among the requisite skills and competencies, build effective training models, and shape an effective DevOps culture.
Business and technical agility with Team Topologies - QCon Plus - 2021-05-26Matthew Skelton
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business and technical environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation, pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, cloud-native, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business and technical agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business and technical agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and an awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business and technical agility.
From a talk at QCon Plus on 2021-05-26
Business and Technical Agility with Team Topologies, Jun 2021Manuel Pais
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business and technical environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation,
pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, cloud-native, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business and technical agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business and technical agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business and technical agility.
Continuous Delivery at scale - Matthew Skelton - NHS Digital agile CoP - Marc...Matthew Skelton
Continuous Delivery practices have increasingly become “table stakes” for effective software delivery since the publication of the book Continuous Delivery by Jez Humble and Dave Farley in 2010. The combination of sound technical practices and a scientific approach to testing and feature development has led to significant success with software delivery with organisations around the world.
However, in large organisations with many teams and many different suppliers, there are also many ideas about what Continuous Delivery is. This variety of approaches and assumptions can lead to conflicts around deployments, testing, releasing, and operations, resulting in a macro-level sub-optimal flow of change.
In this talk, Matthew Skelton will share some insights from his time spent as Engineering Lead at a large GOV.UK department during most of 2018. There he championed Continuous Delivery practices across 70+ teams and 7 locations, helping to raise standards for software operability, Developer Experience (DevEx), testing, deployments, and inter-team communications. He will share some practical techniques for getting Continuous Delivery working at scale.
Forget monoliths vs microservices - focus on team cognitive load - Team Topol...Matthew Skelton
The “monoliths vs microservices” debate often focuses on technological aspects, ignoring strategy and team dynamics. Instead of technology, smart-thinking organizations are beginning with team cognitive load as the guiding principle for modern software. In this talk we explain how and why, based on material from the book Team Topologies by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais.
Forget monoliths vs microservices - focus on team cognitive load - Team Topol...Conflux
The “monoliths vs microservices” debate often focuses on technological aspects, ignoring strategy and team dynamics. Instead of technology, smart-thinking organizations are beginning with team cognitive load as the guiding principle for modern software. In this talk we explain how and why, based on material from the book Team Topologies by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais.
From a talk by Matthew Skelton of Conflux at NAV, Oslo on 2020-01-23
Team Topologies in action - early results from industry - DOES Las Vegas 2020...Matthew Skelton
Since the book Team Topologies was published in 2019, organizations around the world have started to adopt Team Topologies principles and practices like Stream-aligned teams, modern platforms, well-defined team interactions, and team cognitive load as a key driver for fast software delivery and operations.
We will look at examples from these organizations:
- Footasylum gives fashion-focused youth a multi-branded retail experience mixing global sportswear household names with emerging brands and its own stable of in-house labels. Founded in 2005, Footasylum now has 70 stores across the UK and a thriving ecommerce platform, with revenue of £260m per annum and over 2500 employees. Footasylum used Team Topologies patterns to revolutionize their ecommerce platform.
- PureGym is Britain’s largest gym chain - the first to gain over 1 million members. As PureGym expanded, so did the need for software to enable their members to book and manage gym sessions. Since 2019, PureGym has re-aligned its teams and team interactions based on Team Topologies patterns, helping to scale the engineering teams and improve flow.
- uSwitch / RVU, one of the UK’s leading consumer price comparison websites, has grown a modern platform from scratch, allowing stream-aligned teams to focus on consumers needs, offloading infrastructure provisioning concerns to the platform which also provides cross-cutting services around scalability, security and data management
- Wealth Wizards is a UK company making financial advice affordable and accessible to everyone through online tools and apps. The engineering division at Wealth Wizards has used the Team Topologies ideas around team cognitive load to help right-size their teams and align teams to the most important flows of business change.
For each of these examples, we explore how the ideas and patterns in Team Topologies were useful to the organization and the results of the changes.
Business Agility with Team Topologies @ Digital Transformation London meetup,...Manuel Pais
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business and technical environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation, pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, cloud-native, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business and technical agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business and technical agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and an awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business and technical agility.
Manuel Pais is co-author of Team Topologies: organizing business and technology teams for fast flow. Recognized by TechBeacon as a DevOps thought leader, Manuel is an independent IT organizational consultant and trainer, focused on team interactions, delivery practices and accelerating flow. Manuel is also a LinkedIn instructor on Accelerating Continuous Delivery in the Enterprise.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/manuelpais/
Beyond the Spotify Model - Team Topologies - Tech.rocks - 2020-12-10 - Matthe...Matthew Skelton
From a talk at Tech.Rocks 2020
For effective, modern, cloud-connected software systems we need to organize our teams in certain ways. Taking account of Conway’s Law, we look to match the team structures to the required software architecture, enabling or restricting communication and collaboration for the best outcomes.
This talk will cover the basics of organization design using Team Topologies, exploring a selection of key team types, and how and when to use them in order to make the development and operation of your software systems as effective as possible. The talk is based on the book Team Topologies by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais including first-hand experience helping companies around the world with the design of their technology teams.
Key takeaways:
1. Why using the “Spotify Model” of team design is not enough
2. The four fundamental team topologies needed for modern software delivery
3. The three team interaction modes that enable fast flow and rapid learning
4. How to address Conway’s Law, cognitive load, and team evolution with Team Topologies
Accidental Architects - how HR designs software systems - Team Topologies - e...Matthew Skelton
Who designs the architecture of your software systems? Conway's Law suggests that HR may be strongly shaping software architecture by deciding how teams are composed and interrelate. Do you want HR designing your software architecture?
Organization architecture and software system architecture need to be co-designed to avoid friction from Conway's Law.
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From a talk given by Matthew Skelton at Elabor8- 2020-05-27
Business and Technical Agility with Team Topologies @ WTF Is Cloud Native, No...Manuel Pais
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business and technical environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation, pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, cloud-native, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business and technical agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business and technical agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and an awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business and technical agility.
What is platform as a product? Clues from Team Topologies - Puppetize 2020 - ...Matthew Skelton
Savvy organisations are discovering the value of treating their internal platforms as products. But what does it mean to treat a “platform as a product”? What benefits does this give, and why would an organisation adopt this approach?
In this talk, [Matthew Skelton] [Manuel Pais], co-author of the book Team Topologies, explains why the platform-as-product approach can be a game-changer for organisations building and running software-enabled products and services. Using ideas & patterns from Team Topologies - including Thinnest Viable Platform, team cognitive load, and the evolutionary team interaction modes - [Matthew] [Manuel] explains how organisations like adidas and Uswitch have successfully used the platform-as-product model to accelerate and simplify the delivery of software at scale.
Playing Tetris with Cognitive Load @ Craft Conference, Jun 2021Manuel Pais
Autonomous empowered cross-functional product teams. Sounds like a dream team, doesn’t it? So what does this mean for software delivery teams? Do we expect such a team to set up their CI/CD tooling and pipelines, automate infra, test and secure *all the things*, and, of course, run and monitor their product live? Oh wait, there’s more: they need to actually understand who their customers are, what they need from the product, what is causing friction, and what is the viability of our product as a net positive for the organization. Sounds familiar? Congratulations, you’re already playing Tetris with cognitive load! Want to know more about team cognitive load and how we can make use of effective team topologies and interactions to balance and minimize the cognitive load across an ecosystem of teams. Join this talk and climb up the cognitive load Tetris ranking with the help of one of the co-authors of the book Team Topologies: Organizing Business and Technology Teams for Fast Flow!
What is platform as a product? Clues from Team Topologies - WTFinar with Cont...Matthew Skelton
From a webinar on 29 April 2021
https://info.container-solutions.com/wtf-is-platform-as-product-2nd-edition
Savvy organisations are discovering the value of treating their internal platforms as products. But what does it mean to treat a “platform as a product”? What benefits does this give, and why would an organisation adopt this approach?
In this talk, [Matthew Skelton] [Manuel Pais], co-author of the book Team Topologies, explains why the platform-as-product approach can be a game-changer for organisations building and running software-enabled products and services. Using ideas & patterns from Team Topologies - including Thinnest Viable Platform, team cognitive load, and the evolutionary team interaction modes - [Matthew] [Manuel] explains how organisations like adidas and Uswitch have successfully used the platform-as-product model to accelerate and simplify the delivery of software at scale.
How to choose tools for DevOps and Continuous Delivery - #doxlonMatthew Skelton
With an ever-increasing array of tools and technologies claiming to 'enable DevOps', how do we know which tools to try or to choose? In-house, open source, or commercial? Ruby or shell? Dedicated or plugins? It transpires that highly collaborative practices such as DevOps and Continuous Delivery require new ways of assessing tools and technologies in order to avoid creating new silos. Matthew Skelton shares his recent experience of helping many different organisations to evaluate and select tools to facilitate DevOps; the recommendations may surprise you.
A talk given at DevOps Exchange (#doxlon) meetup group on 24th July 2014: http://www.meetup.com/DevOps-Exchange-London/events/194288152/
Business agility with Team Topologies - NatWest Group - 2021-01-19Matthew Skelton
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation, pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and an awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business agility.
Matthew Skelton, co-author of Team Topologies, shares insights from organizations in several different industry sectors including banking, financial services, insurance, retail, and leisure.
Monoliths vs Microservices is the Wrong Question; Start with Team Cognitive L...Manuel Pais
The “monoliths vs microservices” debate often focuses on technological aspects, ignoring strategy and team dynamics. Instead of technology, smart-thinking organizations are beginning with team cognitive load as the guiding principle for modern software. In this talk I explain how and why.
Key takeaways:
- What is team cognitive load and why that matters
- Using team cognitive load as the guiding principle for sustainable ownership and evolution of software systems
- What are the fundamental topologies and interaction modes that help reduce cognitive load
The People Pillar of Cloud Adoption: Developing Your Workforce & Building Dig...Amazon Web Services
A successful cloud-transformation journey incorporates three pillars: people, process, and technology. Far too often, organisations focus on process improvements and technology implementation, but ignore the human aspect. Many leaders acknowledge that the first two are easy to modify, while influencing culture is more difficult. This session covers best-practice methods meant to empower customers to address this challenge. Learn about roles and responsibilities germane to the transition and post-cloud adoption phase. Assess your organisation’s gaps among the requisite skills and competencies, build effective training models, and shape an effective DevOps culture.
Digital Foundations to Transform Customer Experiences Through Process Optimiz...Jared Hill
The Urban Affairs Coalition (UAC) was looking to streamline their processes to save their nonprofit clients time and money, allowing them to have a greater impact. See how Lime Consulting Group helped (UAC) build a roadmap and a business case to gain the consensus they needed internally to secure funding to get started. By mapping business processes in Signavio, UAC was able to standardize the way they do business today, so that they can automate with the use of technology in the future.
Agile Mumbai 2019 Conference | Defining and redefining value for Digital Tra...AgileNetwork
Session Title : Defining and redefining value for Digital Transformation
Session Overview : 90% of start-ups fail. 50% of these failures are attributed to one fact - they developed products that are not the need or unusable. Also, few years back Forrester estimated that $900 billion worth of spend in digital transformation will miss the mark. These failure statistics are startling. This session will ponder this challenge from examples of building various products in Brillio, how value is defined upfront, methods of engineering value and how each team member can be empowered with this thinking.
WFT is platform as a product? Clues from Team Topologies - WTFinar with Conta...Matthew Skelton
From a WTFinar with Container Solutions on 2020-11-19
Savvy organisations are discovering the value of treating their internal platforms as products. But what does it mean to treat a “platform as a product”? What benefits does this give, and why would an organisation adopt this approach?
In this talk, [Matthew Skelton] [Manuel Pais], co-author of the book Team Topologies, explains why the platform-as-product approach can be a game-changer for organisations building and running software-enabled products and services. Using ideas & patterns from Team Topologies - including Thinnest Viable Platform, team cognitive load, and the evolutionary team interaction modes - [Matthew] [Manuel] explains how organisations like adidas and Uswitch have successfully used the platform-as-product model to accelerate and simplify the delivery of software at scale.
Soluciones de Código Abierto - Perspectivas, Resultados y Soluciones de ValorWSO2
En la presente Webinar veremos como las soluciones de código abierto, registran un claro "crecimiento exponencial" en su uso corporativo y gubernamental en Latinoamérica y cómo estas entidades han depositado la confianza de su crecimiento en ellas. Veremos ejemplos de cómo la plataforma de código abierto de WSO2 nos permite desarrollar estas soluciones y responder a los desafíos presentes y futuros con claros ejemplos y demostraciones.
Connecting Salesforce.com & Office 365 using Microsoft Flow & PowerAppsJared Matfess
What do Salesforce.com & Office 365 have in common? A lot! And now leveraging technologies such as Microsoft PowerApps & Flow, you can build some very interesting business solutions. Learn how to extend your sales operations beyond CRM and empower Information Workers both at their desks and in the field!
Beyond The Intranet: Digital Workplace Apps, Solutions & BotsRichard Harbridge
Now that your organization has implemented an Office 365 Intranet, what’s next?
In this session we will respond to the ever-increasing demand for powerful and integrated solutions that support users’ needs across their digital workplace and beyond. Leveraging Office 365 means that you have access to entirely new ways of building solutions faster than ever before. The best part? It’s not just IT that can build these great solutions!
What you’ll learn:
Join Richard Harbridge as we explore real world examples and best practices for how organizations can deliver more value with integrated solutions. We will discuss Bots, Power Automate, PowerApps, Microsoft Forms, Integrations, Office 365 development, Industry innovation, and more!
Power Platform Governance Center of ExcellenceWithum
Unlock the full potential of Microsoft Power Platform and effectively govern your low-code applications and citizen developers. Learn how to define, monitor, track, govern, and perfect your Power Platform adoption and strategy, allowing you to focus on what you love most.
Developing a Modernization Strategy: Evaluating the Options by Chris KoppeFresche Solutions
Chris Koppe, VP of Corporate Strategy at Fresche Legacy presented Developing a Modernization Strategy: Evaluating the Options during iBelieve 2015.
This presentation covers:
- Modernization strategies
- Establishing goals and objectives
- Strategy definition
- Planning
- Getting funding and support
DevOps provides the ability to increase time to market to an new level. The question is no longer if we need to speed up our delivery. The challenge is to find the right „pace“ for your product. Not every organization and every product needs to run at the speed of Netflix and Spotify, even if we’d like it to be like this. We need to adjust the organization, processes and tools appropriatly and to identify the real bottlenecks in the delivery pipeline continuously. And by the way, we need to justify our investment in the DevOps mission. Are we just automating the current processes or can we use this DevOps thing to really support our business? In this talk, I’d like to discuss with you how to find the right design for your delivery process and your organization to behave as a business enabler and how you can scale DevOps within your organization without loosing agility. Let’s explore how we can listen carefully to the unknown customer out there and to build software they really like in the speed of your business.
apidays Australia 2022 - Guardianship Model - Managing digital hypergrowth at...apidays
apidays Australia 2022 - Enabling Business Networks
September 14 & 15, 2022
Guardianship Model - Managing digital hypergrowth at scale
Souvik Mukherjee, Head of Technology, WooliesX
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Accelerating Flow with Team Topologies & Friends @ Wroclaw Kanban, Lean & Cof...Manuel Pais
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly-changeable business environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation, pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business agility in organizations of all sizes. In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and an awareness of sociotechnical mirroring. Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal” and achieve true business agility.
Beyond Engineering: The Future of Platforms @ CraftConf, May 2023Manuel Pais
While we have made great strides in the last decade to break down silos in Engineering, in most organizations when you look outside there is still an abyss of understanding between teams sitting in different divisions in the organization. This can significantly slow down the flow of value to our customers, directly and indirectly.
You’ve likely experienced at least one of these in your professional career… Not being allowed to use the right tool for the job because of a strict procurement process. Spending half a day to get a 20€ expense approved and reimbursed. Or a much anticipated employee onboarding portal that ends up being just a UI on top of the 73 steps and 14 approvals required to set up an employee workstation.
None of this happens in bad faith, it just turns out traditionally teams and groups are incentivized for outputs, the more cycles you can run and the faster you can close requests the better. So we end up optimizing internal processes at the cost of company outcomes. I posit that, ultimately, this happens because teams don’t see each other as customers.
You might be thinking “But they’re not our customers, they’re our colleagues!”. Also true. The key here is that every team, every division in an organization can adopt a platform mindset in which they treat what they offer to other teams as an internal product.
That means other teams become your customers. Certainly there are particular dynamics at play when your customers are your peers as well but fundamentally the core principles of the “platform as a product” approach translate well across the organization.
We have seen this work well inside engineering, and we start to see it in other domains of the business as well: data science & business intelligence, but also leadership, marketing, legal, HR, etc. We will cover some early examples during this talk and think ahead to what the future holds for platforms beyond engineering.
Business and Technical Agility with Team Topologies @ CAS 2022Manuel Pais
Las organizaciones que no se adaptan rápidamente al entorno empresarial moderno y altamente cambiante están fracasando en gran número. El aumento de la regulación, las presiones del cambio climático, la digitalización y (recientemente) la pandemia de COVID-19 están impulsando la necesidad de agilidad empresarial en organizaciones de todos los tamaños.
En esta charla, explicaremos cómo los patrones y principios de Team Topologies promueven una verdadera agilidad del negocio a través de un flujo rápido de cambio de software (soportado por prácticas modernas de ingeniería), feedback rápido desde los sistemas en vivo, bajo acoplamiento sistémico y una visión de la arquitectura sociotécnica.
Team Topologies está ayudando a las organizaciones de todo el mundo a adaptarse a la "nueva normalidad" y lograr una verdadera agilidad empresarial. Miraremos ejemplos concretos de cómo han evolucionado algunas empresas bajo estos patrones y principios.
Playing Tetris with Cognitive Load @ Chile Ágil meetup, Oct 2022Manuel Pais
Equipos de productos interfuncionales autónomos y empoderados. Suena como un equipo de ensueño, ¿no?
Entonces, ¿qué significa esto para los equipos de entrega de software? ¿Esperamos que un equipo así configure sus herramientas y canalizaciones de CI/CD, automatice la infraestructura, pruebe y asegure *todas las cosas* y, por supuesto, ejecute y supervise su producto en vivo? Oh, espera, hay más: necesitan entender realmente quiénes son sus clientes, qué necesitan del producto, qué está causando fricción y cuál es la viabilidad de nuestro producto como un beneficio neto para la organización.
¿Suena familiar? ¡Enhorabuena, ya estás jugando al Tetris con carga cognitiva!
Quiere saber más sobre la carga cognitiva del equipo y cómo podemos hacer uso de topologías e interacciones de equipo efectivas para equilibrar y minimizar la carga cognitiva en un ecosistema de equipos.
¡Únase a esta charla y ascienda en el ranking Tetris de carga cognitiva con la ayuda de uno de los coautores del libro Team Topologies: Organizing Business and Technology Teams for Fast Flow!
Del expositor:
Manuel Pais es coautor de Team Topologies: Organizando equipos de negocios y tecnología para un flujo rápido. Reconocido por TechBeacon como un líder de pensamiento de DevOps, Manuel es un consultor organizacional de TI independiente y trainer, centrado en las interacciones del equipo, las prácticas de entrega y la aceleración del flujo. Manuel también es instructor de LinkedIn en Continuous Delivery.
Twitter: @manupaisable
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/manuelpais/
Keynote: Frozen DevOps? The not-so-technical Last Mile @ DevOpsDays Portugal,...Manuel Pais
Why are so many organizations stuck in the “middle” of DevOps evolution? What’s preventing them from achieving higher levels of performance despite all the automation, tooling, and good practices in place?
Puppet’s State of DevOps Report 2021 provides important research-based clues to answer these questions, supported by the patterns and recommendations in Team Topologies.
In this talk we cover the self-imposed limitations of blindly following some “myths” around DevOps. Almost 80% of organizations are stuck in the “frozen middle” of DevOps evolution because of lack of organizational sensemaking abilities. The margin for growth for these organizations is tremendous, but they need to think beyond technical capabilities to unlock the potential of their teams to deliver with more autonomy and a sense of purpose.
The data shows that Team Topologies provides the necessary organizational and team interaction patterns that help organizations achieve performance metrics such as delivering a new customer change request to live in under one hour, or diagnosing and recovering from a serious issue in production in under an hour.
Fundamentally, we need to supercharge the fundamental principles of DevOps: fast feedback loops, minimal waste, removing bottlenecks, and continuous learning & improvement.
Remote-first Team Interactions with Team Topologies @ Team Topologies Confere...Manuel Pais
We know that team-based software delivery can be very effective but how can we promote and enable team-based approaches for organisations that are fully remote or hybrid? What should teams think about and what patterns can teams adopt to be effective when most people are not in the office?
Based on the ideas from Team Topologies book and the new Remote Team Interactions Workbook, co-author Manuel Pais will present some useful approaches to clarify and evolve inter-team interactions and communication in this remote-first world.
Remote-first Team Interactions with Team Topologies @ DevOps Perth Meetup, Ju...Manuel Pais
Remote-first work is the "new normal" for companies around the world. There is no shortage of advice on how individual teams can bond and work effectively remotely.
However, there is not much on how to address remote interactions between different teams that need to collaborate remotely, as part of the same value stream. Moving from the physical to the online world can further expose pre-existing interaction problems, increase wait times and slow down delivery and possibly response to incidents.
Based on the ideas from Team Topologies, Manuel Pais and Matthew Skelton will present some useful approaches to clarify and evolve inter-team interactions and communication in this remote-first world.
Designing Team APIs and virtual communication channels that promote relevant team interactions while minimizing communication overhead will help modern organizations keep a fast flow of delivery once they're past the initial adaptation to teleworking.
Following well-defined interaction patterns and architecting for team-first software boundaries will also help reduce communication overhead, clarify expectations on teams, and increase visibility of on-going work and support.
Remote-first Team Interactions for Business and Technology Teams @ Berlin CTO...Manuel Pais
Remote-first work is the "new normal" for companies around the world. There is no shortage of advice on how individual teams can bond and work effectively remotely.
However, there is not much on how to address remote interactions between different teams that need to collaborate remotely, as part of the same value stream. Moving from the physical to the online world can further expose pre-existing interaction problems, increase wait times and slow down delivery and possibly response to incidents.
Based on the ideas from Team Topologies, Manuel Pais and Matthew Skelton will present some useful approaches to clarify and evolve inter-team interactions and communication in this remote-first world.
Designing Team APIs and virtual communication channels that promote relevant team interactions while minimizing communication overhead will help modern organizations keep a fast flow of delivery once they're past the initial adaptation to teleworking.
Following well-defined interaction patterns and architecting for team-first software boundaries will also help reduce communication overhead, clarify expectations on teams, and increase visibility of on-going work and support.
What is Platform as a Product? Clues from Team Topologies @ DevOps Porto meet...Manuel Pais
Savvy organizations are discovering the value of treating their internal platforms as products. But what does it mean to treat a "platform as a product"? What benefits does this give, and why would an organization adopt this approach?
In this talk, Manuel Pais, co-author of the book Team Topologies, explains why the platform-as-product approach can be a game-changer for organizations building and running software-enabled products and services. Using ideas & patterns from Team Topologies - including Thinnest Viable Platform, team cognitive load, and the evolutionary team interaction modes - Manuel explains how organizations like Uswitch and Adidas have successfully used the platform-as-product model to accelerate and simplify the delivery of software at scale.
Frozen DevOps? Team Topologies Comes to the Rescue! @ DevSecOps - London Gath...Manuel Pais
Why are so many organizations stuck in the "middle" of DevOps evolution? What's preventing them from achieving higher levels of organizational performance despite all the automation, tooling, and good practices in place?
Puppet's State of DevOps Report 2021 provides important research-based clues to answer these questions, supported by the patterns and recommendations in Team Topologies.
In this talk we cover the self-imposed limitations of blindly following some “myths” around DevOps. Almost 80% of organizations are stuck in the "frozen middle" of DevOps evolution because of lack of organizational sensemaking abilities. The margin for growth for these organizations is tremendous, but they need to think beyond technical capabilities to unlock the potential of their teams to deliver with more autonomy and a sense of purpose.
The data shows that Team Topologies provides the necessary organizational and team interaction patterns that help organizations achieve performance metrics such as delivering a new customer change request to live in under one hour, or diagnosing and recovering from a serious issue in production in under an hour.
Get the State of DevOps Report 2021 here:
https://puppet.com/resources/report/2021-state-of-devops-report
To learn more about Team Topologies:
https://teamtopologies.com/learn
https://academy.teamtopologies.com
Accelerating Flow with Team Topologies & Friends @ Adaptive Organizations Wee...Manuel Pais
Organizations that do not adapt rapidly to the modern, highly changeable business environment are failing, and failing in large numbers. Increased regulation, pressures from climate change, shifting of energy sources, digitalization, and (recently) the COVID-19 pandemic are all driving a need for business agility in organizations of all sizes.
In this talk, we’ll explore how the patterns and principles from Team Topologies promote true business agility through a rapid flow of software change, fast feedback from running systems, a strong drive for loose coupling, and an awareness of sociotechnical mirroring.
Combined with a product mindset and techniques from Domain-driven Design, the Team Topologies approach is helping organizations around the world to adapt to the “new normal”
and achieve true business agility.
Frozen DevOps? Team Topologies Comes to the Rescue! @ DevOpsDays Poznan, Oct ...Manuel Pais
Why are so many organizations stuck in the "middle" of DevOps evolution? What's preventing them from achieving higher levels of organizational performance despite all the automation, tooling, and good practices in place?
Puppet's State of DevOps Report 2021 provides important research-based clues to answer these questions, supported by the patterns and recommendations in Team Topologies.
In this talk we cover the self-imposed limitations of blindly following some “myths” around DevOps. Almost 80% of organizations are stuck in the "frozen middle" of DevOps evolution because of lack of organizational sensemaking abilities. The margin for growth for these organizations is tremendous, but they need to think beyond technical capabilities to unlock the potential of their teams to deliver with more autonomy and a sense of purpose.
The data shows that Team Topologies provides the necessary organizational and team interaction patterns that help organizations achieve performance metrics such as delivering a new customer change request to live in under one hour, or diagnosing and recovering from a serious issue in production in under an hour.
Get the State of DevOps Report 2021 here:
https://puppet.com/resources/report/2021-state-of-devops-report
To learn more about Team Topologies:
https://teamtopologies.com/learn
https://academy.teamtopologies.com
What Is Platform as a Product - Clues from Team Topologies @ AXA, Sep 2021Manuel Pais
Savvy organisations are discovering the value of treating their internal platforms as products. But what does it mean to treat a “platform as a product”? What benefits does this give, and why would an organisation adopt this approach?
In this talk, Manuel Pais, co-author of the book Team Topologies, explains why the platform-as-product approach can be a game-changer for organisations building and running software-enabled products and services. Using ideas & patterns from Team Topologies - including Thinnest Viable Platform, team cognitive load, and the evolutionary team interaction modes - Manuel explains how organisations like Uswitch have successfully used the platform-as-product model to accelerate and simplify the delivery of software at scale.
Traditional vs Modern Internal Platforms @ Humanitec webinar, Jun 2021Manuel Pais
What are some of the key differences between traditional and modern internal platforms?
Many organizations have built large internal “platforms” over the years, but never achieved the benefits in speed and reduced cognitive load for their development teams that more nimble organizations increasingly showcase.
Why is that? What kind of behaviors and mindset drive modern Internal Developer Platforms (IDPs) and platform teams?
There is hardly a more competent DevOps thought leader on this subject than Manuel Pais, co-author of the book Team Topologies.
During the webinar we will answer questions like:
How do you define core goals of modern internal platforms?
What are typical consumption patterns of IDPs?
How can you balance between platform stakeholders vs customers?
Fast Flow & Organizational Evolution with Team Topologies @ Masters of Softwa...Manuel Pais
This guest lecture at the Masters of Software Engineering graduate program covers common organizational challenges to achieve fast flow and high performing teams. Key aspects of Team Topologies that are covered include the four fundamental team types, the team API, cognitive load, and the three core team interaction modes.
Kubernetes is Not Your Platform, It's Just the Foundation @ UK Cloud Infrastr...Manuel Pais
Kubernetes helps us tame sprawling microservices architectures and address increased operational complexity. Kubernetes gives developers abstractions and APIs to deploy and run their services.
But there is a price to pay in terms of both the in-house operational expertise required and the learning curve for application teams. The elephant in the room is that to run, maintain and evolve Kubernetes, we likely need a dedicated Kubernetes team.
Is the tradeoff between better operational tools and introducing a new dependency layer on the path to production for application teams worthwhile? Are we making life easier for application teams or instead reducing their end-to-end ownership?
Regardless of all the technical benefits that Kubernetes undoubtedly brings, team interactions are still key for successfully delivering and running services. We will look at a couple of organizations that have succeeded by focusing on reducing the cognitive load for application teams.
Unfortunately, many organizations see Kubernetes as “the” platform, rather than just a technical foundation for a true internal platform. In the worst case, they mandate all teams to adopt Kubernetes, regardless of both the application teams’ and the platform’s maturity levels.
Successful Kubernetes adoption requires thinking about what a platform really means and learning which team structures and interactions work well. And evolve them over time.
Builder.ai Founder Sachin Dev Duggal's Strategic Approach to Create an Innova...Ramesh Iyer
In today's fast-changing business world, Companies that adapt and embrace new ideas often need help to keep up with the competition. However, fostering a culture of innovation takes much work. It takes vision, leadership and willingness to take risks in the right proportion. Sachin Dev Duggal, co-founder of Builder.ai, has perfected the art of this balance, creating a company culture where creativity and growth are nurtured at each stage.
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish CachingThijs Feryn
A presentation about the usage and availability of Varnish on Kubernetes. This talk explores the capabilities of Varnish caching and shows how to use the Varnish Helm chart to deploy it to Kubernetes.
This presentation was delivered at K8SUG Singapore. See https://feryn.eu/presentations/accelerate-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-varnish-caching-k8sug-singapore-28-2024 for more details.
GraphRAG is All You need? LLM & Knowledge GraphGuy Korland
Guy Korland, CEO and Co-founder of FalkorDB, will review two articles on the integration of language models with knowledge graphs.
1. Unifying Large Language Models and Knowledge Graphs: A Roadmap.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08302
2. Microsoft Research's GraphRAG paper and a review paper on various uses of knowledge graphs:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/graphrag-unlocking-llm-discovery-on-narrative-private-data/
Search and Society: Reimagining Information Access for Radical FuturesBhaskar Mitra
The field of Information retrieval (IR) is currently undergoing a transformative shift, at least partly due to the emerging applications of generative AI to information access. In this talk, we will deliberate on the sociotechnical implications of generative AI for information access. We will argue that there is both a critical necessity and an exciting opportunity for the IR community to re-center our research agendas on societal needs while dismantling the artificial separation between the work on fairness, accountability, transparency, and ethics in IR and the rest of IR research. Instead of adopting a reactionary strategy of trying to mitigate potential social harms from emerging technologies, the community should aim to proactively set the research agenda for the kinds of systems we should build inspired by diverse explicitly stated sociotechnical imaginaries. The sociotechnical imaginaries that underpin the design and development of information access technologies needs to be explicitly articulated, and we need to develop theories of change in context of these diverse perspectives. Our guiding future imaginaries must be informed by other academic fields, such as democratic theory and critical theory, and should be co-developed with social science scholars, legal scholars, civil rights and social justice activists, and artists, among others.
Connector Corner: Automate dynamic content and events by pushing a buttonDianaGray10
Here is something new! In our next Connector Corner webinar, we will demonstrate how you can use a single workflow to:
Create a campaign using Mailchimp with merge tags/fields
Send an interactive Slack channel message (using buttons)
Have the message received by managers and peers along with a test email for review
But there’s more:
In a second workflow supporting the same use case, you’ll see:
Your campaign sent to target colleagues for approval
If the “Approve” button is clicked, a Jira/Zendesk ticket is created for the marketing design team
But—if the “Reject” button is pushed, colleagues will be alerted via Slack message
Join us to learn more about this new, human-in-the-loop capability, brought to you by Integration Service connectors.
And...
Speakers:
Akshay Agnihotri, Product Manager
Charlie Greenberg, Host
Transcript: Selling digital books in 2024: Insights from industry leaders - T...BookNet Canada
The publishing industry has been selling digital audiobooks and ebooks for over a decade and has found its groove. What’s changed? What has stayed the same? Where do we go from here? Join a group of leading sales peers from across the industry for a conversation about the lessons learned since the popularization of digital books, best practices, digital book supply chain management, and more.
Link to video recording: https://bnctechforum.ca/sessions/selling-digital-books-in-2024-insights-from-industry-leaders/
Presented by BookNet Canada on May 28, 2024, with support from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
LF Energy Webinar: Electrical Grid Modelling and Simulation Through PowSyBl -...DanBrown980551
Do you want to learn how to model and simulate an electrical network from scratch in under an hour?
Then welcome to this PowSyBl workshop, hosted by Rte, the French Transmission System Operator (TSO)!
During the webinar, you will discover the PowSyBl ecosystem as well as handle and study an electrical network through an interactive Python notebook.
PowSyBl is an open source project hosted by LF Energy, which offers a comprehensive set of features for electrical grid modelling and simulation. Among other advanced features, PowSyBl provides:
- A fully editable and extendable library for grid component modelling;
- Visualization tools to display your network;
- Grid simulation tools, such as power flows, security analyses (with or without remedial actions) and sensitivity analyses;
The framework is mostly written in Java, with a Python binding so that Python developers can access PowSyBl functionalities as well.
What you will learn during the webinar:
- For beginners: discover PowSyBl's functionalities through a quick general presentation and the notebook, without needing any expert coding skills;
- For advanced developers: master the skills to efficiently apply PowSyBl functionalities to your real-world scenarios.
The Art of the Pitch: WordPress Relationships and SalesLaura Byrne
Clients don’t know what they don’t know. What web solutions are right for them? How does WordPress come into the picture? How do you make sure you understand scope and timeline? What do you do if sometime changes?
All these questions and more will be explored as we talk about matching clients’ needs with what your agency offers without pulling teeth or pulling your hair out. Practical tips, and strategies for successful relationship building that leads to closing the deal.
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...UiPathCommunity
💥 Speed, accuracy, and scaling – discover the superpowers of GenAI in action with UiPath Document Understanding and Communications Mining™:
See how to accelerate model training and optimize model performance with active learning
Learn about the latest enhancements to out-of-the-box document processing – with little to no training required
Get an exclusive demo of the new family of UiPath LLMs – GenAI models specialized for processing different types of documents and messages
This is a hands-on session specifically designed for automation developers and AI enthusiasts seeking to enhance their knowledge in leveraging the latest intelligent document processing capabilities offered by UiPath.
Speakers:
👨🏫 Andras Palfi, Senior Product Manager, UiPath
👩🏫 Lenka Dulovicova, Product Program Manager, UiPath
Neuro-symbolic is not enough, we need neuro-*semantic*Frank van Harmelen
Neuro-symbolic (NeSy) AI is on the rise. However, simply machine learning on just any symbolic structure is not sufficient to really harvest the gains of NeSy. These will only be gained when the symbolic structures have an actual semantics. I give an operational definition of semantics as “predictable inference”.
All of this illustrated with link prediction over knowledge graphs, but the argument is general.
Neuro-symbolic is not enough, we need neuro-*semantic*
Team Topologies in Action: early results from industry @ DevOps Enterprise Summit London (virtual), Jun 2020
1. TeamTopologies.com
@TeamTopologies
Team Topologies in action
early results from industry
Matthew Skelton & Manuel Pais
co-authors of Team Topologies
@matthewpskelton @manupaisable
DOES London Virtual - 24 June 2020
2. 2
Manuel Pais
Independent IT organizational
consultant and trainer
Ex-dev, ex-build manager,
ex-tester, ex-QA lead
Twitter: @manupaisable
LinkedIn: manuelpais
Matthew Skelton
Founder at Conflux
Experience as: software developer,
technical director, change enabler,
conference organizer...
Twitter: @matthewpskelton
LinkedIn: matthewskelton
3. Team Topologies
3
Organizing business and
technology teams for fast flow
Matthew Skelton & Manuel Pais
IT Revolution Press, 2019
teamtopologies.com/book
4. “innovative tools and concepts for
structuring the next generation
digital operating model”
Charles T. Betz,
Principal Analyst, Forrester Research
4
26. ● 2015-2020
● Huge growth in members
● Joining (mobile app)
● Bookings, payments
● “Online-first” experience
27
27. Less Than 10 People
Project A
Project B
Bugs Small Changes
GSD
Projects BAU
Project C
Handover
28
2015
28. Team Grew to 15 People
Project D
Project E Small Changes
Project F
Projects BAU
Project G
Project G
Bugs
GSD
Handover
29
2017
29. Bugs & Small Change
Project G
Project H
Project I
Project J
Project K
Trigger: Rapid Team Growth to 40
Projects BAU
GSD
Handover
30
2019
30. The Monolith
Site
Project G
Project H
Project I
Project J
BAU
Vendor API
Reseller API
Mobile App
Mobile Team
Customer API
Membership Management System
Single code
repository
31
2019
32. Re-defining Teams
SREDeveloper Experience
Membership Management Gateway (MMG)
Acquisition
Join Process
Landing Pages
…
Gym
Team
Time Tables
Gyms
…
Payments
Reconciliation
Join Payments
…
Retentio
n
Members Area
CRM
…
Other
….
…
Streams
Enabling
Mobile ??Platform
33
2020
34. SREDevEx
Using Facilitation and Developing X as a Service
In Gym Experience Team
Payments Team
Mobile Team
?
Acquisition Team
Membership Management Gateway Team
Retention Team
35
2020
35. Continuous Collaboration and Facilitation
SRE
DevEx
In Gym Experience Team
Payments Team
Mobile Team ?
Acquisition Team
Membership Management Gateway Team
Retention Team
36
2020+
36. “Team Topologies helped us at PureGym
to evaluate the relationship between our
teams and the business strategy, to
increase team efficiency, and evolve
away from a monolith.“
-- John Kilmister,
Principal Software Architect, PureGym
38
41. ● UK's leading comparison
and switching service
● Founded in 2000
● ~250 staff, £140m+ revenue
● > 2010: Autonomous teams
● > 2017: Platformization
44
44. “people were spending more time having
to interact with relatively low-level
services thus spending their time on
relatively low-value decisions”
Paul Ingles, CTO at RVU / Uswitch
47
47. 50
2017
Infra platform
started with few
services
First customer
(centralized
logging, metrics,
auto scaling)
2018
Started using SLAs
and SLOs, clarifying
reliability/latency/etc
Growing traffic in
platform vs AWS
49. 52
2019
Addressed critical
cross-functional
needs (GDPR,
security, alerts +
SLOs as a service)
Adoption by HMRT
(Highest Maturity
& Revenue Team)
2017
Infra platform
started with few
services
First customer
(centralized
logging, metrics,
auto scaling)
2018
Started using SLAs
and SLOs, clarifying
reliability/latency/etc
Growing traffic in
platform vs AWS
54. “Engineering principles guided the way we
organise teams: loosely-coupled and highly
cohesive. Team Topologies is great for tying
a lot of those ideas together, and most
importantly giving it some language.“
Paul Ingles, CTO at RVU / Uswitch
63
63. “Team Topologies has changed how we
form development teams in Visma...
Does [the team] get the right support
from enabling teams? ... What is the sum
of the cognitive load on this team?”
T. Alexander Lystad, Chief Cloud Architect, Visma
73
64. Results
● From 6 deploys per year (2015) to
2 deploys per week (& N per day)
● Increased ownership in teams
75
teamtopologies.com/examples
72. “Team Topologies ... has given us the
tools we were looking for and have
helped us to build a plan and have
confidence that we know where we’re
going and how to get there.”
Richard Marshall, CTO, Wealth Wizards
84
73. Results
● Clear patterns and language
● Framework for design decisions
● Confidence in scaling approach
86
https://medium.com/ww-engineering/to-monolith-or-to-microservice-f8c3f967e63c