DevOps: Five Key Challenges and Five Tips

by Roger StrukhoffSeptember 25, 2015
One of the world's leading DevOps proponents, Andi Mann, gave his advice during this year's DevOps Summit NY.

DevOps: From blank stares to action

“If you ask senior executives if their organizations are doing DevOps, you often get a blank stare,” according to Andi Mann, formerly of CA’s Office of the CTO, and now head of Sageable as well as Conference Chair of @DevOpsSummit.

Andi has written extensively on the topic of DevOps, and is one of the leading analysts and commentators in this field.

Andi has also noted that when you dig a little deeper and ask senior executives if they are doing things to improve collaboration and communications between Development and Operations, then “you will find that there is not a single organization that is not doing something in this effort.”

Andi has outlined five challenges to DevOps that he frequently hears discussed (noted in the following graphic):

Andi Mann DevOps Issues

Within this context, he offers up numerous specific bullet points based on his experience in talking to large enterprise customers: 

  • They cannot achieve the same levels of agility and personal responsibility as a smaller or less complex organization.
  • They cannot stream new code into production and just shut down for a couple of hours to fallback if it fails.
  • They rarely have two “pizza teams” for development or operations.
  • They cannot sign up for cloud services with a credit card without exceeding their monthly limit and/or being fired (Note: This one seems very credible, and puts the lie to rampant “shadow IT” throughout the universe of enterprises).
  • They cannot allow developers to access raw production data, let alone copy it to their laptop for development or testing.
  • They cannot choose to stream new code into production in violation of a change freeze, or even without the prior approval of a CAB.
  • They cannot just tell developers to carry pagers “until their software is bedded in.”
  • They cannot put developers and operators together because one team works 24×7 shifts in seven data centers, while the other works 16-hour days in 12 different locations.

 

Big companies waste money; SMBs don’t have it

Pulling away from the view of large organizations, it seems apparent that similar challenges are faced by smaller organizations as well. In fact, in conversations I have in my role as Conference Chair of Cloud Expo, I find that progressive IT and LOB leaders in smaller organizations face inertia across the board, a frustration that only increases with the lack of capital and budget to move things forward.

Simply put, big companies waste money; small companies don’t have it.

What to do? Andi offers five key tips, as outlined in the slide below:

Andi Mann DevOps Tips

Altoros Take

Altoros also addresses DevOps issues very seriously. We believe the most important organizational skill needed by Cloud Foundry adopters is an awareness in the company’s C-suite and other management positions that the platform represents a fundamental change from centralized, stovepiped applications to highly distributed services across virtual infrastructures.

The use of Cloud Foundry also leads enterprises down the path to faster app development and deployment, a continuous delivery model, and even to the emerging DevOps culture.

The practice of developers and operations engineers using the same techniques and working together throughout the entire application life cycle forms the core of DevOps culture. Closely related to Agile Development, DevOps removes the border separating IT and development.

In our guide to CF implementation, we have a chapter on the topic of “Creating a DevOps Team,” as well as several other chapters on organizational and operational challenges that are relevant to the overall topic of DevOps.

 

Related:

You can also read this interview with Andi Mann from the DevOps Summit.