Where
is your project's goal-line? Where is that line you cross then breathe a
sigh of relief and celebrate accomplishment? For many it is when
user-acceptance tests had passed, and the necessary documents were signed, and
then the party begins. The team pats each other on the back, the project
manager gives a speech recounting the personal sacrifices made during the
'crunch', and a glass is raised. In a few days or a week most are off on
other projects, their focus reset to a new goal line off in the distance while
the last project begins to fade from memory.
So
what happens to the newly created application? Why did we build it
again? Oh right - to support or fulfill some function of the
business. Possibly a critical function of the business. So there
are a few steps remaining. The application needs to get deployed, made
operational, users trained, and (fingers crossed) delivering business
value. Maybe it's an application that manages and supports new drug
trials, or tracks the import and export of commodities, or provides online
trading, or any number of other business functions. To the
business, until the application starts supporting these functions it is a cost
(often a large cost) with zero associated benefit. A 'negative'.
The
goal-line is shifting for application development teams. The game is
changing. A couple of trends are underway that are moving the goal-line
towards 'closing the loop'.
The
first trend is DevOps – the gradual melding of Development and
Operations. Much of this is a necessity to support the faster and more
effective deployment of applications as part of the shift to continuous
delivery of applications. Related pressures are simply that the costs
from inefficiencies between the two groups is forcing barriers to drop and
their processes to be intertwined.
Another
trend is where projects are becoming more accountable for business value
delivery, as opposed to software delivery. This is largely in response to
the dismal track record of IT software projects where rate of 'successful'
delivery has been stuck in the 25-35% range for almost two decades now.
By
responding to these trends the original purpose of the project instead of
getting foggy or lost along the way, now becomes the goal-line. The
loop gets closed. No pats on the back, no parties until the delivered
application actually fulfills its mandate. With all eyes trained on
this goal-line and with every daily decision weighed against this objective, the
chances of hitting it go way, way up.