Any organization that wants a DevOps transformation will require significant investment in terms of money, time, and resources. This process will necessitate the overhaul of everything, including communication and training tools. The ability to set and assess performance benchmarks helps define the objective, increase efficiency, and improve productivity to track success.
A DevOps initiative aims to improve communication and collaboration between the development and operation teams in the organization. The requirement is to facilitate faster delivery of software and, in the process, reduce outages, downtime, and any issues that can impact end-user experience negatively.
Addressing specific challenges and the needs of an organization requires monitoring via key metrics. The KPIs for DevOps should be such that it provides complete details of the impact on the business value of a DevOps success.
7 Aspects to Measure Success in DevOps
A DevOps implementation can only be justified if there are appropriate and measurable metrics that can guide technology in a production-related decision.
Key metrics should have a well-defined set of goals at the beginning. Stakeholders in a business should agree at the start on the outcomes of the business return on investment. This will then lay down the path for prioritizing the DevOps process KPIs.
The following aspects need to be considered to evaluate performance metrics that have the maximum impact on the development and growth of a business.
1. Deployment Frequency
The software requires regular updates, new features, and upgrades for better accuracy and efficiency for building and maintaining advantages over competitors—users changing need a more agile and faster system.
Deployment frequency measurement on a weekly or daily basis provides better insight into which updates were beneficial and which areas still needed improvement. Deployment frequency is a critical metric that helps steady and sustainable development and growth.
2. Change Failure Rate
DevOps is a complex subject, and no single metric can measure its success or failure. Deployment frequency is an example where increasing the frequency helps for greater agility, but they must also be seen in conjunction with failure rates. It is also seen that frequent changes that are deployed fail often, then there is a risk of loss of customer satisfaction and revenue.
If the key performance indicator suggests a high change failure rate after deployment frequency increases. Then it means scaling it back and working on long-term solutions.
3. Mean Time to Recovery (MTTR)
Mean Time to Recovery (MTTR) is an important performance indicator that measures a company’s efficiency in resolving issues. MTTR measures the average time taken to recover from failure to resolution. It evaluates the impact on the business, the repercussion on customer experience, and understanding and prioritizing the problem.
MTTR provides insights into whether the customer experienced an error, lost access, or abandoned the application. Improving MTTR helps reduce the problem’s impact and cost and maintains customer satisfaction.
4. Lead Time
This is the average time measured for the concept to get implemented. It is an effective metric that allows us to evaluate workflow and productivity. Lower lead time means the DevOps team is proactive and adapts quickly to feedback. The agile process used in DevOps enables faster TAT – Turnaround Time to meet customers’ requirements and take advantage of emerging trends.
5. Changing Volume
The wisdom behind DevOps support is to make frequent changes, but if the volume of change between deployments is not measured, then the deployment frequency metrics can be misleading.
The end objective should not be minor and for insubstantial changes to be made regularly. Instead, it should aim at updates that are impactful and improving overall experience. This will help measure progress easily, and help track and measure the amount of change with each deployment.
6. Defect Escape Rate
No matter how experienced a DevOps team is, errors are bound to happen, mainly when upgrades occur. Defects are part of software development, and one should take this aspect as part of the production process.
The defect escape rate is an important parameter that evaluates how frequently errors were discovered and rectified during the pre-production phase. It helps to assess the collective quality of the software release.
7. Customer Tickets
A good user experience means better customer satisfaction and increased sales. Also, the motivating factor for innovation is intended to improve customer satisfaction. Customer tickets are an effective measure of the DevOps team’s success.
Quality control should not be based on the customer tickets as a rule, as it means discovering errors and issues from third parties instead of the internal team. On the other hand, reduction or lower customer tickets indicate that application performance is seamless and of good quality.
How DevOps tools / services deliver faster and better quality?
Service providers provide DevOps tools that observe performance from top to bottom to understand how infrastructure impacts performance. The DevOps tools, which are cloud-based, work on the company’s business operations. It identifies issues in the testing, development, and production environments.
DevOps tools provide end-to-end visibility for cloud-native apps. It overcomes the fog associated with highly distributed systems. It gives complete insights into the business infrastructure and supporting cloud services.
Umbrella Infocare’s AWS Cloud DevOps Automation assists you in establishing organizational DevOps Automation Culture, automating processes, collaboration and monitoring utilizing best practices and top-notch tools.
With that said!
An organization’s DevOps practices’ success depends on its ability to track and measure KPIs and other metrics, evaluate the success, and identify improvement areas. Healthy AWS Cloud migration services coupled with effective DevOps practices reduce dependencies, enabling operations and developers to collaborate and deliver at high velocity.
This article is originally published on Umbrella Infocare Blog
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