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DevOpstastic
Correlations BetweenDevOps and Holacracy
Helen BealDevOpsologist@helenranger4
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DevOpstastic
Fanatical about making life on earth fantastic.
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DevOpstastic
Success
Learning
What’s in a name?The first US spacecraft to reach a celestial body
Crash landed on the dark side!
DEVOPS
Experimentation
Failure
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DevOpstastic
“Principles of official jurisdictional areas Every bureaucracy has its own special area: firemen do not arrest criminals, doctors do not empty bedpans, professors do not deliver mail.” Max Weber
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DevOpstastic
“The authority to give commands is distributed in a formal way and regulated.”
Max Weber
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DevOpstastic
“Certain people have the right to control others, and this is spelled out clearly.” Max Weber
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“…The work is a duty.”
Max Weber
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DevOpstastic
Culture and the Flow of Information
Source: Westrum, A Typology of Organizational Cultures, 2004
Pathological Bureaucratic GenerativeInformation is hidden Information may
be ignoredInformation is actively sought
Messengers are ‘shot’ Messengers are isolated Messengers are trainedResponsibilities are shirked
Responsibility is compartmentalized
Responsibilities are shared
Bridging is discouraged Bridging is allowed but discouraged
Bridging is rewarded
Failure is covered up Organization is just and merciful
Failure causes enquiry
Novelty is crushed Novelty creates problems Novelty is implemented
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DevOpstastic
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“The most exciting breakthroughs of the twenty-first century will not occur because of
technology, but because of an expanding concept of what it
means to be human.”
John Naisbitt
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DevOpstastic
Correlations?
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DevOpstastic
Self-organising
teams
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DevOpstastic
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No job titles, focus on roles
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Stephen Williams, VP Engineering
“Having the right vision and ability to choose your path has created motivation and desire to succeed across our teams. It’s inspiring them to want to deploy faster and create
opportunities for the business to learn quicker about new features. Having standards for tooling and best practices is helping to create a culture where more collaboration and sharing of ideas is starting to happen so we only solve
problems the one time.”
Benefits
• Deploy faster• The business learns quicker• More collaboration and sharing of ideas• Barriers broken down• Speaking the same language, sharing ideas
“Our TM DevOps Strategy has
provided goals and a shared vision for our
Teams.”
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DevOpstastic
Continuous Delivery Engineers
Scrum masters
Product Owners
Technical Leads
DBAs
Developers
QA and testers
Sys admins
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DevOpstastic
Flattened hierarchies and
distributed authority
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DevOpstastic
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“Staff are now in control of their own shops. Hopefully they’re enjoying their work more. They’re creating something very different in each store. In the Kensington branch they sell a lot of Scrabble and Monopoly. In St Pancras it’s novellas that you might finish on your journey: ‘Those sell in huge quantities.’ In Trafalgar Square it’s Union Jacks; in Walthamstow, they shift ‘a ton’ of camera-lens mugs.”
James Daunt
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DevOpstastic
Peer based reviews
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Amplified feedback
loops / processing tensions
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The Three Ways
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Continuous funding
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Three Mistakes of Budgeting Process
1. Basing business decisions on a centralized annual budget cycle
2. Using the capability to hit budget targets as a key indicators of performance
3. Basing business decisions on the financial reporting structure of capital versus operating expense
Joanne Molesky
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DevOpstastic
Key Recommendations
• Use rolling forecasts• Apply dynamic resource allocation to reduces risk• Track products or services, not projects• Be flexible and apply control at the right level
Joanne Molesky
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DevOpstastic
Incremental, iterative
improvement
MinimumViable Process
24 hours
2 - 4 weeks
Daily Scrum(15 minutes)
SPRINTNo changes allowed!
Burndown Chart
Team
Next Sprint
Sprint Planning Meeting(4 – 8 hours) Sprint Review
(2-4 hours)
Sprint Retrospectiv
e(1.5-3 hours)
Sprint Backl
og
Process
Backlog
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AgileDevelopment
Service Management
Organisational Management
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Transparency
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Automation
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DevOpstasticMartin Gutenbrunner
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Ideation
Integration
ValidationOperation
Realisation
DevO
ps
The DevOps Loop ©Ranger4
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In Conclusion
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"The world as we have created it is a process of our thinking. It cannot be changed without changing our thinking.”
Albert Einstein
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Organizing around people...
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Organisational EvolutionStage Typified by Current
ExamplesKey
BreakthroughsGuiding
Metaphor
REDConstant exercise of power by chief to keep troops in line. Fear is the glue of the organisation. Highly reactive, short-term focus. Thrives in chaotic environments.
• Mafia• Street Gangs• Tribal militia
• Division of labour• Command
authority
Wolf pack
AMBERHighly formal roles within a hierarchical pyramid. Top-down command and control (what and how). Stability valued above all through rigorous processes. Future is repetition of past.
• Catholic church• Military• Most government
agencies• Public school
systems
• Formal roles (stable and scalable hierachies)
• Processes (long-term perspectives)
Army
ORANGEGoal is to beat competition, achieve profit and growth. Innovation is key to staying ahead. Management by objectives (command and control on what; freedom on the how).
• Multinational companies
• Charter schools
• Innovation• Accountability• Meritocracy
Machine
GREENWithin the classic pyramid structure, focus on culture and empowerment to achieve extraordinary employee motivation.
• Culture driven organisations (e.g. Southwest Airlines, Ben & Jerry’s…)
• Empowerment• Values-driven
culture• Stakeholder
models
Family
TEALSelf-organising and self-managed teams with coaches when needed. Coaches do not have P&L responsibility or managerial authority.
• Spotify, FAVI, Morning Star, Waterstones
• Trusting those doing the job
• Autonomy, mastery and purpose
SystemFrom ‘Reinventing Organisations’ by Frederic Laloux
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DevOpstastic
StructureOrange Practices Teal Practices
1. Organisation Structure Hierarchical pyramid - Self-organising teams- When needed, coaches (no P&L
responsibility, no management authority) cover several teams
2. Coordination Coordination through fixed meetings at every level (from executive team downward), often leading to meeting overload
- No executive team meetings- Coordination and meetings mostly ad hoc when needs arise
3. Projects Heavy machinery (program & project managers, Gantt charts, plans, budgets, etc.) to try and control complexity and prioritise resources
- Radically simplified project management
- No project managers, people self-staff projects
- Minimum (or no) plans and budgets, organic prioritisation
4. Staff Functions Plethora of central staff functions for HR, IT, purchasing, finance, controlling, quality, safety, risk management, etc.
- Most functions performed by teams themselves, or by voluntary task forces
- Few staff remaining have only advisory role
From ‘Reinventing Organisations’ by Frederic Laloux
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DevOpstastic
Human ResourcesOrange Practices Teal Practices
1. Recruitment Interviews by trained HR personnel, focus is on fit with job description - Interviews by future colleagues, focus is on fit with organisation and with purpose
2. Onboarding (Mostly administrative onboarding process) - Significant training in relational skills and in company culture- Rotation programs to immerse oneself in the organisation
3. Training - Training trajectories designed by HR- Mostly skill and management training
- Personal freedom and responsibility for training- Critical importance of common training that everybody attends
4. Job Titles and Job Descriptions
Every job has job title and job description - No job titles- Fluid and granular roles instead of fixed job descriptions
5. Individual purpose (It’s not the organisation’s role to help employees identify their personal calling)
- Recruitment, training, and appraisals used to explore juncture of individual calling and organisational purpose
6. Flexibility and time commitment
- Honest discussion about individual time commitment to work vs. other meaningful commitments in life
- High degree of flexibility in working hours, as long as commitments are upheld
7. Performance Management - Focus on individual performance- Appraisals established by hierarchical superior- Appraisal discussion aims for objective snapshot of past
performance
- Focus on team performance- Peer-based processes for individual appraisals- Appraisal discussion turned into personal inquiry into one’s learning journey
and calling
8. Compensation - Decision made by hierarchical superior- Individual incentives- Meritocratic principles can lead to large salary differences
- Self-set salaries with peer calibration for base pay- No bonuses, but equal profit sharing- Narrower salary differences
9. Appointment and promotions
- Intense jockeying for scarce promotion leads to politics and dysfunctional behaviour
- Silos – every manager is king of his castle
- No promotions, but fluid rearrangement of roles based on peer agreement- Responsibility to speak up about issues outside of one’s scope of authority
10. Dismissal - Boss has authority (with JR approval) to dismiss a subordinate- Dismissal mostly a legal and financial process
- Dismissal last step in mediated conflict resolution mechanism- In practice very rare- Caring support to turn dismissal into a learning opportunity
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DevOpstastic
Daily LifeOrange Practices Teal Practices
1. Office Spaces - Standardised, soulless professional buildings- Abundant status markers
- Self-decorated, warm spaces, open to children, animals, nature- No status markers
2. Meetings (Many meetings but few meeting practices) - Specific meeting practices to keep ego in check and ensure everybody’s voice is heard
3. Decision-making - High up in the pyramid- Any decision can be invalidated by hierarchical superior
- Fully decentralised based on advice process (or on holacratic decision-making mechanisms)
4. Conflicts (Conflict often glossed over, no conflict resolution practices) - Regular time devoted to bring to light and address conflicts- Multi-step conflict resolution process- Everyone trained in conflict management- Culture restricts conflict to the conflicting parties and mediators; outsiders are
not dragged in
5. Information Flow - Information is power and is released on a need-to-know basis- Secrecy toward the outside world is the default position
- - All information available in real-time to all, including about company financials and compensation
- Total transparency invites outsiders to make suggestions to better bring about purpose
6. Values (Values often only a plaque on the wall) - Clear values translated into explicit ground rules of (un)acceptable behaviours to foster safe environment
- Practices to cultivate discussions about values and ground rules
7. Reflective Spaces - Quiet room- Group meditation and silence practices- Large group reflection practices- Team supervision and peer coaching
8. Mood Management - Conscious sensing of what mood would serve the organisation’s purpose
9. Community Building - Storytelling practices to support self-disclosure and build community
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DevOpstastic
Major Organisational Processes
Orange Practices Teal Practices1. Purpose (No practices to list to the purpose; self-preservation against
competition is the key driver of decision-making)- Organisation is seen as a living entity with its own evolutionary purpose- The concept of competition is irrelevant; “competitors” are embraced to pursue
purpose- Practices to listen into the organisation’s purpose
- Everyone’s a sensor- Large group processes- Meditations, guided visualisations etc- Responding to outside prompting
2. Strategy Strategy course charted by top leadership - Strategy courses organically from the collective intelligence of self-managing employees
3. Innovation and Product Development
- Outside in: customer surveys and segmentation define the offer- Client needs are created if necessary
- Inside out: offer is defined by purpose- Guided by intuition and beauty
4. Supplier Management Suppliers chosen based on price and quality - Suppliers chosen also by fit and purpose
5. Purchasing and Investments
- Authorisation limits linked to level in hierarchy- Investment budgets steered by top management
- Anybody can spend any amount provided advice process is respected- Peer based challenging of team’s investment budget
6. Sales and marketing - Brands positioned to fit consumer segmentation (outside in)- Sales force driven by targets and incentives
- Marketing as a simple proposition: this is our offer to the world (inside out)- No sales targets
7. Planning, Budgeting and Controlling
- Based on “predict and control”- Painful cycles of mid-term planning, yearly and monthly budgets- Stick to the plan is the rule, deviations must be explained and gaps
closed- Ambitious targets to motivate employees
- Based on “sense and respond”- No or radically simplified budgets, no tracking of variance- Workable solutions and fast iterations instead of searching for “perfect”
answers- Constant sensing of what’s needed- No targets
8. Environmental and Social Initiatives
- Money as extrinsic yardstick: Only if it doesn’t cost too much initiate- Only the very top can begin initiatives with financial consequences
- Integrity as intrinsic yardstick: What is the right thing to do?- Distributed initiative taking, everyone senses the right thing to do
9. Change Management - Whole arsenal of change management tools to get organisation from A to B
- (“Change” no longer a relevant topic because organisation constantly adapts from within)
10. Crisis Management - Small group of advisors meet confidentially to support CEO in top-down decision making
- Communication only when decision is made
- Everyone involved to let the best response emerge from the collective intelligence
- If advice process needs to be suspended, scope and time of suspension is defined
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DevOpstastic
“Holacracy structures your organisation for
evolution.”
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DevOpstastic
Be DevOpstastic