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Create visible workflows to achieve well-architected software.
Understand and use meaningful data to measure success.
Integrate and automate quality, security, and compliance into daily work.
Understand the unique values and behaviors of a successful organization.
LLMs and Generative AI in the enterprise.
An on-demand learning experience from the people who brought you The Phoenix Project, Team Topologies, Accelerate, and more.
Learn how making work visible, value stream management, and flow metrics can affect change in your organization.
Clarify team interactions for fast flow using simple sense-making approaches and tools.
Multiple award-winning CTO, researcher, and bestselling author Gene Kim hosts enterprise technology and business leaders.
In the first part of this two-part episode of The Idealcast, Gene Kim speaks with Dr. Ron Westrum, Emeritus Professor of Sociology at Eastern Michigan University.
In the first episode of Season 2 of The Idealcast, Gene Kim speaks with Admiral John Richardson, who served as Chief of Naval Operations for four years.
New half-day virtual events with live watch parties worldwide!
DevOps best practices, case studies, organizational change, ways of working, and the latest thinking affecting business and technology leadership.
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Could right fit help talent discover more meaning and satisfaction at work and help companies find lost productivity?
The values and philosophies that frame the processes, procedures, and practices of DevOps.
This post presents the four key metrics to measure software delivery performance.
January 8, 2025
In a compelling analysis of modern enterprise platforms, former Amazon platform architect and enterprise technology veteran Gregor Hohpe challenges conventional wisdom about how organizations can balance standardization with innovation. His insights arrive at a critical moment when enterprises are grappling with unprecedented technological complexity while seeking ways to accelerate development and ensure compliance.
This article reviews his recent talk at the 2024 Enterprise Technology Leadership Summit: Platforms: Perfectly Portable Productivity Propellants?
In the presentation, Hohpe posits that today’s enterprise technology landscape presents a fundamental challenge: even simple applications require integration with numerous open-source projects and dependencies, creating what Hohpe calls an “octopus architecture.” This complexity is further compounded by the industry’s shift toward DevOps and “shift-left” methodologies, which compress traditionally sequential processes into parallel workflows managed by single teams.
While this approach eliminates handoffs and improves feedback cycles, it creates cognitive overload for development teams who must simultaneously handle business analysis, operations, development, and maintenance. As Hohpe notes, “We have this bad habit of pushing technology not to the limit of the technology, but to our own limitations.”
Traditional enterprise architecture often relies on a pyramid model, where common infrastructure services form the base and more specialized business applications sit at the top. However, Hohpe argues this model is fundamentally flawed for modern platform thinking. Instead, he proposes a “double pyramid” approach where platforms enable both standardization at the bottom and innovation at the top.
Drawing parallels from the automotive industry, Hohpe highlights how companies like Volkswagen successfully implemented platform strategies that achieved:
Hohpe outlines several critical metrics for evaluating platform effectiveness:
The presentation identifies several crucial mistakes organizations should avoid:
For organizations building internal platforms, Hohpe offers several strategic insights:
Organizations should concentrate on building platform capabilities that cloud providers cannot replicate, such as:
Platform teams should actively manage their position relative to cloud provider capabilities:
Platform teams must recognize their role as wholesale consumers of cloud services and advocate for appropriate tools and APIs that support managing services at scale.
As enterprises continue to grapple with technological complexity, platforms offer a promising path forward. However, success requires careful attention to abstraction design, business domain understanding, and the balance between standardization and innovation. The key lies not in choosing between speed and control, but in designing platforms that enable both through thoughtful harmonization.
Organizations that can successfully implement these platform principles will be better positioned to manage complexity while enabling innovation at scale. As Hohpe concludes, the goal is to create “golden paths” for developers that provide both speed and safety, rather than restrictive environments that stifle creativity and progress.
You can watch Hohpe’s full presentation in the IT Revolution Video Library here.
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