How The Unicorn Project Aligns with The Phoenix Project

Editor’s Note: You can meet Gene at the 2020 DevOps Enterprise Summit (DOES) October 28-30 in Las Vegas. Visit the Sonatype booth to receive a free copy of The Unicorn Project. DOES explores everything related to open source security, at scale. Sonatype’s Derek Weeks and DJ Schleen are both presenting at the event. Register here to join Derek, DJ, Mark, and others at the exclusive Sonatype party.

Edwards Deming went to post-war Japan in the late 1940s to help with the census. While there, he built relationships with some of the main manufacturers in the region, helping them understand the value of building quality into a product as part of the production process, thus lowering time to market, eliminating rework, and saving company resources.

In his 1982 book, Out of the Crisis, Deming explained in detail why Japan was ahead of the American manufacturing industry and what to do about. His 14 Points on Quality Management helped revitalize American industry. Unknowingly, he laid the foundation for DevOps 40 years later.

Eli Goldratt published The Goal in 1984, focusing on the “Theory of Constraints,” the idea that a process can only go as fast as it’s slowest part. In fictionalized novel form, Goldratt was able to reach a wide audience who would utilize the theory to help find bottlenecks, or constraints, within production that hold back the entire system. Once again, the theories espoused in The Goal were a precursor to the DevOps movement 40 years later.

In January 2013, 40 years after Deming and Goldratt reshaped the manufacturing processes in America, Gene Kim published The Phoenix Project. He used the same format as Goldratt, telling the story in a fictional novel format with characters who were easily identifiable within the software manufacturing process, from a manager’s point of view. (Read more...)

*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Sonatype Blog authored by Mark Miller. Read the original post at: https://blog.sonatype.com/how-the-unicorn-project-aligns-with-the-phoenix-project