Book Image

Driving DevOps with Value Stream Management

By : Cecil 'Gary' Rupp
Book Image

Driving DevOps with Value Stream Management

By: Cecil 'Gary' Rupp

Overview of this book

Value Stream Management (VSM) opens the door to maximizing your DevOps pipeline investments by improving flows and eliminating waste. VSM and DevOps together deliver value stream improvements across enterprises for a competitive advantage in the digital world. Driving DevOps with Value Stream Management provides a comprehensive review and analysis of industry-proven VSM methods and tools to integrate, streamline, and orchestrate activities within a DevOps-oriented value stream. You'll start with an introduction to the concepts of delivering value and understand how VSM methods and tools support improved value delivery from a Lean production perspective. The book covers the complexities of implementing modern CI/CD and DevOps pipelines and then guides you through an eight-step VSM methodology with the help of a use case showing an Agile team's efforts to install a CI/CD pipeline. Free from marketing hype or vendor bias, this book presents the current VSM tool vendors and customer use cases that showcase their products' strengths. As you advance through the book, you'll learn four approaches to implementing a DevOps pipeline and get guidance on choosing the best fit. By the end of this VSM book, you'll be ready to develop and execute a plan to streamline your software delivery pipelines and improve your organization's value stream delivery.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
1
Section 1:Value Delivery
7
Section 2:VSM Methodology
13
Section 3:VSM Tool Vendors and Frameworks
18
Section 4:Applying VSM with DevOps

Making continuous Lean-Agile improvements

By now, it must be apparent to you that the organization's value stream management initiatives are not one-time events. Instead, they are ongoing and cyclical over the lifetime of the product line. However, in this chapter, you will discover that many of the initial Lean improvement initiatives tend to have a larger scale than Agile-based continuous improvements associated with team-based retrospectives.

That's not to say that Lean improvements can't be made on a small scale. Fundamentally, everyone in a Lean organization is encouraged to uncover problems that impede their ability to work, find solutions, and implement them. Still, agile teams and individuals typically cannot make wholesale changes to equipment and tools, nor can they procure new equipment and tools to improve continuous flows across the value stream, without formal approvals from their executives. Implementing large-scale improvements and business transformations...