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Driving DevOps with Value Stream Management

You're reading from  Driving DevOps with Value Stream Management

Product type Book
Published in Aug 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801078061
Pages 676 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Cecil 'Gary' Rupp Cecil 'Gary' Rupp
Profile icon Cecil 'Gary' Rupp
Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1:Value Delivery
2. Chapter 1: Delivering Customer-Centric Value 3. Chapter 2: Building On a Lean-Agile Foundation 4. Chapter 3: Analyzing Complex System Interactions 5. Chapter 4: Defining Value Stream Management 6. Chapter 5: Driving Business Value through a DevOps Pipeline 7. Section 2:VSM Methodology
8. Chapter 6: Launching the VSM Initiative (VSM Steps 1-3) 9. Chapter 7: Mapping the Current State (VSM Step 4) 10. Chapter 8: Identifying Lean Metrics (VSM Step 5) 11. Chapter 9: Mapping the Future State (VSM Step 6) 12. Chapter 10: Improving the Lean-Agile Value Delivery Cycle (VSM Steps 7 and 8) 13. Section 3:VSM Tool Vendors and Frameworks
14. Chapter 11: Identifying VSM Tool Types and Capabilities 15. Chapter 12: Introducing the Leading VSM Tool Vendors 16. Chapter 13: Introducing the VSM-DevOps Practice Leaders 17. Chapter 14: Introducing the Enterprise Lean-VSM Practice Leaders 18. Section 4:Applying VSM with DevOps
19. Chapter 15: Defining the Appropriate DevOps Platform Strategy 20. Chapter 16: Transforming Businesses with VSM and DevOps 21. Assessments 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Chapter 1: Delivering Customer-Centric Value

  1. Digitally enhanced technologies now allow organizations to conduct business on the internet, and via mobile technologies, while providing near-real-time global access to information and knowledge-based services. Plus, products communicate and obtain updates via the Internet of Things (IoT).
  2. The problem is that humans have an annoying habit of using the same terms among themselves, but thinking about the meanings of the words in very different ways. Different semantic meanings of terms make human-to-human and human-to-computer communications very challenging.
  3. The combination of resulting experiences (including price) that an organization delivers to a group of intended customers in a given time frame, in return for those customers buying/using or otherwise doing what the organization wants instead of taking some competing alternative.
  4. Everybody.
  5. Because, in a competitive market, you will be quickly beaten by your competitors...
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