[dev-äps] noun - Enterprise capability for continuous software delivery that enables clients to seize market opportunities and reduce time to customer feedback. To find out more, read this complimentary eBook, DevOps for Dummies, courtesy of IBM.
Find out how we reduced their deployment time from 4 hours to 8 minutes, and improved the team's ability to deliver applications updates faster with better team collaboration.
Increasing demand for Cloud, Mobile and Social applications and services is putting relentless pressures on organizations to release applications and services even faster and at higher quality. Teams working across functional silos, as well as diverse platforms struggle to develop, build, release and manage changes in an efficient manner. DevOps extends lean and agile principles across the broader lifecycle and across the enterprise, reducing waste, duplication and friction so more focus can be put on effective and efficient innovation.
DevOps Disciplines
Collaborative Lifecycle Management
Standardize the entire development organization’s (distributed AND mainframe) on a platform that enables cross communication between developers, testers, and stakeholders, while providing business intelligence to the IT operations executives.
Continuous Testing
Shift your risk to the left in the development cycle, with automated and continuous testing solutions. Reduce the cost of fixing defects, and protect your prior development success.
Automated Release and Deployment
Eliminate the error prone, and manual tasks of software deployment. Automate repeatable processes, and instrument the release process so everyone has a clear view of what is in production.
Continuous Monitoring
Actively monitor your infrastructure so you stay aware of problems before your customers contact you. Hook this feedback back into your development process for continuous improvement.