Skip to content

March 2, 2021

The Seven Domains of Transformation

By IT Revolution

Implementing a digital transformation in any enterprise can be dramatic and daunting, but essential for continued success. In particular, moving from a project-based delivery model to a product-centric model can be a game changer.

In this post, developed from the white paper The Project to Product Transformation, leaders can learn how to grasp the complexities and difficulties of implementing organizational change and digital transformation through seven key areas, or domains. These product transformation domains, as we call them, will help focus your efforts and lead to greater success with less drama.

First, we’ll give a simple definition to set the context for transformational change. Then we’ll dive into each of the seven domains of a project to product transformation in more detail.

This post is an excerpt from The Project to Product Transformation white paper, written by Ross Clanton, Amy Walters, Jason Zubrick, Pat Birkeland, Mik Kersten, Alan Nance, and Anders Wallgren. You can download and read the white paper in its entirety here.

Digital Transformation in the Enterprise

When thinking about transformations of any kind, it can be difficult to visualize all the factors involved. By definition, transformation is “a thorough or dramatic change in form or appearance.”

This is especially challenging when it comes to changing individual behaviors.

As you can imagine, the difficulties in fighting the inertia of an enterprise to move from a project-based delivery model to a product-centric model can be defined with this generic definition of transformation: dramatic change. Dramatic and daunting.

To help leaders grasp the complexities and difficulties of implementing change within the enterprise, we have defined common areas of focus for categorizing those changes.

These categories are referred to in this post as Product Transformation Domains. These domains are the highest level of focus for the change and are designed to help focus your change.

Next, we will dive into each of the domains of a product transformation journey and give a simple definition to set the context for transformational change.

The Seven Domains of Transformation

There are seven domains of product transformation. Each domain contains unique properties that may stand alone or have interrelated dependencies to the other domains.

  • Transformation Implementation: Provides guidance for getting the transformation started, driving it, and keeping it alive and well.
  • Business and Technology Synchronicity: All successful transformations bring business and technology organizations closer together. This domain outlines how to tackle the problems of engagement and alignment across the organization. Additionally, it dives into approaches for effective planning and prioritization across technology and business in a product model.
  • Product Taxonomy: Arguably the most difficult domain to explain because it can take on so many different forms from its inception. The Product Taxonomy domain is at the center of designing a product-centric organization.
  • Workforce and Talent: Focuses on organizational size and structure, new team roles, and fixed versus variable labor. Additionally, this domain focuses on how to “level-up” employees as they move into new roles in the organization.
  • Funding Model: Addresses how to change funding models to support a product-centric operating model. It is often the most difficult domain to change at the enterprise level because it crosses so many boundaries.
  • Architecture: Allows the transformation to be implemented across a diverse set of tools, software, and infrastructure components used to deliver software in the organization. This domain also encompasses the concepts of value stream architecture and how organizations are taking progressive architectural decisions to deliver value faster.
  • Culture and Leadership: Focuses on how to ignite your culture and engage leadership to ensure you have a successful transformation.

These seven product transformation domains contain numerous examples and learnings from those who have gone through this process and shared their learnings with us.

In order to simplify the domains even further, we have added another facet to the guidance for your transformation process. From the data we collected, interviews we conducted, and our own experiences, we noticed three distinct stages that can significantly alter the strategy and tactics applied toward the implementation.

The following section will define the three stages and how they relate to the seven product transformation domains.

Sign up for the IT Revolution Newsletter to read more articles like this one.

The Three Stages of Product Transformation

A product transformation has multiple stages. Transformational efforts as invasive as these are organic and take on a life of their own. They require different approaches and guidance along their different stages of existence to stay healthy and maintain practicality to the enterprise.

Through our research and experience, we identified three distinct stages of life for any product transformation: incubate, scale, and optimize.

  • Incubate: Incubation is the earliest stage of product transformations. This is the stage in which early adopters experiment and find other like-minded thought leaders to move the organization forward. Incubation is often found in pockets of the enterprise and may or may not apply to all domains in every organization. Incubation, as with the other two stages, can’t be defined by a timeline. Stage timelines are unique to each organization, and just as every living thing has a unique existence, so too does each of the stages within a product transformation life cycle.
  • Scale: Scale is the stage in which most of the transformational change happens. Think of scale as the stage when your transformation enters its teen years and then transitions through its twenties, thirties, and forties. In this stage, your product transformation will typically be driven across most of the enterprise. Incubation built a great foundation for change, convinced the right people, and showed enough value to keep the transformation moving forward. Scale is where the ramp-up begins and the entire enterprise is mobilized and pushed to transform.
  • Optimize: The optimization stage is where the enterprise takes what it learned over the scale stage and continuously improves. Often termed continuous or relentless improvement, the optimization stage continues refining the transformation through measured learnings and tighter business/technology synchronicity.

Recommended Indicators

During the process of researching and interviewing for this guidance, our team found commonalities in our data. The commonalities took many forms, like keywords in interviews to recognizable sub-themes in research and experiences.

We then broke our findings down into a matrix of domains and stages. Where each domain met one of the stages, we extrapolated our findings to fit this domain/stage model. We are calling these findings indicators.

An interesting byproduct of our process was the constraint indicators we found and documented. Within each domain/stage convergence, we focused on the indicators where guidance would help to increase the velocity of transformation.

All the transformation stories we analyzed had numerous “areas and actions to avoid,” and as a result, we realized a framework used to reduce friction was necessary.

You can explore each of the Seven Domains of Transformation in more detail through the individual posts below. Or download the full white paper here


In the full white paper, The Project to Product Transformation, you will find not only the guidance indicators to create, increase, and sustain velocity, but also the negative force learnings that should help you avoid pitfalls in your transformational journey. 

- About The Authors
Avatar photo

IT Revolution

Trusted by technology leaders worldwide. Since publishing The Phoenix Project in 2013, and launching DevOps Enterprise Summit in 2014, we’ve been assembling guidance from industry experts and top practitioners.

Follow IT Revolution on Social Media

No comments found

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published.



Jump to Section

    More Like This

    High Stakes Communication: The Four Pillars of Effective Leadership Communication
    By Summary by IT Revolution

    You've been there before: standing in front of your team, announcing a major technological…

    Mitigating Unbundling’s Biggest Risk
    By Stephen Fishman , Matt McLarty

    If you haven’t already read Unbundling the Enterprise: APIs, Optionality, and the Science of…

    Navigating Cloud Decisions: Debunking Myths and Mitigating Risks
    By Summary by IT Revolution

    Organizations face critical decisions when selecting cloud service providers (CSPs). A recent paper titled…

    The Phoenix Project Comes to Life: Graphic Novel Adaptation Now Available!
    By IT Revolution

    We're thrilled to announce the release of The Phoenix Project: A Graphic Novel (Volume…