Who this book is for
This book was written with a diverse set of roles and skills in mind. While the concepts of DDD have been in existence for a long time, practical application and scaling have been a challenge, arguably due to a dearth of practical techniques, tools, and real-world examples that bring all these concepts together as a cohesive whole. Successful application of these principles requires strong collaboration from a varied set of roles and disciplines across an organization, including executives, business experts, product owners, business analysts, architects, developers, testers, and operators.
Here is a quick summary of reader personas and what they will gain from reading this book:
Executives and business experts should read this book so that they can articulate their vision and the core concepts that justify the need for the solution. Techniques will allow them to do this in an expedient manner and also gain empathy toward what it takes to implement changes quickly and reliably.
Product owners should read this book so that they can act as effective facilitators when communicating with both business and technical team members, making sure that there is no loss in translation.
Architects should read this book so that they gain an appreciation of the fact that it is of utmost importance to understand the problem before thinking of a solution. They will also gain an appreciation of various architecture patterns and how they play in conjunction with DDD principles.
Developers and testers will be able to put their knowledge to work with this practical guide to create elegant software designs that are easy and pleasant to work with and reason about.
The book provides a hands-on approach to gathering requirements effectively, promoting a shared understanding among all team members in order to implement solutions that will be able to withstand the test of a dynamically evolving business ecosystem.