Multiple platform projects competing across the organisation
The investment in a “portal” isn’t showing the expected (and necessary) ROI and adoption
There are requests from application teams which have been in a queue for months
If any of these resonate with you, your business is likely suffering from “Platform Decay”.
The goal of every platform team is to enable a true “self-service” environment for their application teams.
However, with the explosion of cloud services and an ever-growing set of infrastructure options, portals have been unable to keep pace, ticket queues have grown longer, and breakaway platform initiatives have emerged.
The effectiveness of past initiatives has become stale and isn’t enough for your organisation to hit its goals.
In this 30-minute webinar, we'll help you take the first step towards identifying and reversing this dilemma. Turning ticket queue waits from months to minutes.
Take back control of your innovation and technology vision statement project timeline by reversing platform decay.
Agenda
What is platform decay?
Why is it happening?
How to identify and raise team and organisational awareness of it
Steps you can take to stop it
Examples of how teams stopped platform decay
Presenters
Abby Bangser
Principal Engineer at Syntasso
Abby is a Principal Engineer at Syntasso, where she works on Kratix, an open-source cloud-native framework for building internal platforms on Kubernetes. Her keen interest in supporting internal development comes from over a decade of experience in consulting and product delivery roles across platforms, site reliability, and quality engineering.
Abby is an international keynote speaker and co-host of the #CoffeeOps London meetup. Outside of work, Abby spoils her pup Zino and enjoys playing team sports.
Daniel Bryant
Head of Product Marketing at Syntasso
Daniel Bryant is the Head of Product Marketing at Syntasso. His technical expertise focuses on ‘DevOps’ tooling, cloud/container platforms, and microservice implementations.
Daniel is a long-time coder, platform engineer, and Java Champion who contributes to several open-source projects. He also writes for InfoQ, O’Reilly, and The New Stack, regularly presenting at international conferences such as KubeCon, QCon, and JavaOne.
In his copious amounts of free time, he enjoys running, reading, and travelling.