Planview this week announced it completed its acquisition of Tasktop, a provider of a value stream management (VSM) platform that enables DevOps teams to align their efforts more closely with strategic business goals.
Louise Allen, chief product officer for Planview, said the goal is to tighten integration between the Tasktop VSM platform and the project management applications that Planview already provides to software development teams and business executives.
It’s still early days as far as adoption of VSM within DevOps workflows is concerned, but as more organizations realize how dependent they are on software, they need to better align application development projects with their strategic business goals, said Allen. VSM platforms make it possible to analyze data collected from various DevOps tools and enable business and IT leaders to, for example, visualize how a delay to one project might impact revenue goals for an upcoming quarter.
Given the current weakness in the overall economy, organizations are looking to more precisely understand the impact software development decisions will have on the business, she added. As part of an effort to address that requirement, Planview will also make it easier for its applications to consume data that was originally created in Tasktop, she explained.
VSM enables more organizations to function like a software company—aligning application updates with revenue goals. As the number of digital business transformation initiatives being launched increases, organizations are finding they need to operate more like a software company that either manufactures something or provides a service.
The concept of value stream management traces its lineage back to lean manufacturing methods, which called for each step of a manufacturing process to be continuously measured. As software development has evolved from being a craft to an automated process using DevOps best practices, there is growing appreciation for the value of monitoring things such as the impact of missed software development deadlines on the business.
At its core, a VSM platform will automatically convert metrics collected from a DevOps workflow to track a set of key performance indicators (KPIs) defined by the business. Once those metrics are gathered and KPIs established, organizations are then able to apply advanced analytics to align the resources needed to achieve a strategic goal by, for example, devoting more developers to a specific project. The data collected via a VSM platform can also then be shared with business intelligence (BI) applications that business leaders typically use to manage the business.
It’s not clear just how hard business leaders are looking for deeper insights into how software development initiatives are progressing, but at the very least, DevOps leaders need a simpler way to understand all the dependencies that exist between initiatives. Otherwise, they risk missing deadlines simply because no one realized a delay that occurred in one project had a cascading impact across multiple other initiatives. Regardless of who consumes the data generated by a VSM platform, the need to increase visibility across the software development life cycle had never been greater.