Value stream management (VSM) is gaining traction as organizations look to find ways to engage customers more efficiently via digital business transformation initiatives.
A survey of 500 executives, IT and business leaders conducted by Dimensional Research on behalf of Broadcom published this week found 39% of respondents implemented a VSM platform with another 16% having some equivalent capability. Another 31% said their organizations is moving in the direction of adopting a VSM platform. A total of 60% of respondents indicated that they will be using VSM to deliver products in 2023, with 95% of organizations that have adopted VSM also engaged in digital transformation.
Laureen Knudsen, chief transformation officer for Broadcom, said the primary goal is to close the divide that has emerged over the years between software development teams and the rest of the business. More than two-thirds of respondents (68%) reported there are disconnects between the business and software development.
Overall, the Broadcom survey identified increasing customer value (58%), improving product quality (55%), reducing costs (51%), adding more customers (50%, increasing profits (49%) and increasing speed to market (45%) as the top strategic issues organizations face in 2023.
The top benefits derived from investing in VSM were increased transparency (42%), improved organizational alignment (39%), faster solutions to customers (38%), data-driven decision-making (37%) and improved access to data (36%).
VSM 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 and organizations realize how dependent they are on software, there is a growing appreciation for the value of monitoring things such as the impact of missed software development deadlines on the business. At their core, VSM platforms aggregate DevOps metrics and then match them to a set of key performance indicators (KPIs) defined by business leaders. Once those metrics are gathered and correlated, organizations can apply advanced analytics. The goal is to apply algorithms and other forms of predictive analytics that will enable organizations to more easily identify the precise impact software development processes have on the business.
Knudsen said the survey makes it clear a lack of discipline when it comes to software engineering now needs to be addressed as organizations realize how dependent they are on applications to engage customers. Many organizations have, for example, adopted flawed approaches to agile development that wind up creating chaos across the software development life cycle, she noted.
Many organizations, for example, are unsure how much time development teams are spending on retiring the technical debt accrued within legacy applications versus actually working on developing new applications, Knudsen added.
Business conditions tend to change rapidly, so aligning software development with corporate goals is difficult. Nearly three-quarters (72%) of respondents said they are frustrated by the state of the business and constant changes to strategy. Digital business transformation initiatives, however, will require organizations to adopt a more structured approach to software engineering, said Knudsen.
The issue, of course, is the pace at which businesses are already being digitally transformed. The accelerated pace requires almost immediately re-engineering software development processes for them to succeed.