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11/26/2020

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reorganizing technology teams (Part 1)

11/2/2020

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What is the most adequate operating model for software products and platforms?
A lot of companies today are choosing to aggregate their digital divisions with their traditional IT by bringing them into a single technology operating model. 
 
Combining digital operations -- in which cross-functional teams apply new technologies and ways of working, such as agile, to improve user experiences -- and traditional IT delivery (in which technical specialists develop and maintain core business systems according to traditional methods) makes a lot of senses except for the fact that moving to an integrated technology operating model does require significant cultural change: further, to achieve the technical agility of a digital native, it is often enough to form integrated, cross-functional technology teams, which define forward-thinking technology organizations.
 
Part 1: Reorganizing technology teams
 
Today’s software products can be summarized as technology-enable offerings used by customers and employees. Their immediate and primary purpose is to enable users to perform activities that create value, in line with a business’s objectives. For example, a retailer’s search product contributes business value by making it easy for customers to find items on a website or mobile app. Its effectiveness might be measured with conversion-to-sale metrics and enhanced by improvements to search algorithms.
 
Whereas in this context, platform represent the backend tech capabilities, whether provided by individual systems or by assemblies of multiple systems, that power products, as well as the enterprise more broadly. The retail search product previously described, for example, might rely on an inventory platform that includes databases and integrations with suppliers. Typical platforms found at large companies would also include those for enterprise resource planning, customer relationship management, inventory management, and field operations.
 
In summary, an integrated technology model centers on products and platforms – which are two separate technology activities in the company. 
 
Products
  • Purpose: Create business value by enhancing end-user’s experiences
  • Users: Customers and employees
  • Accountability: designers, product managers, business-minded tech teams
  • Pace of innovation: super-fast: updates and upgrades happen as quickly as possible to keep up with customers’ needs
 
Platforms
  • Purpose: Provide capabilities to products
  • Users: Global digital product developers
  • Accountability: technology-minded tech teams
  • Pace of innovation: variable, changes to support products and modernize underlying systems are made as priorities dictate
 
Most companies launch their digital efforts with a focus on creating and improving products through a stand-alone organization that is separate or siloed from company IT. These separately funded digital units deliver user-experience innovations quickly by employing a mix of design and engineering talent, using cloud technologies, following agile delivery practices, and, often, fostering a different working culture and norms—an approach unlike that of a traditional IT function.
 
However, it is important that these digital units and IT departments are closely integrated, with thoughtful coordination and planning between the organizations to prevent any bottlenecks. For instance, as digital efforts expand to cover more customer and employee experiences and incorporate new technologies, integration between digital and traditional technology solutions requires more extensive collaboration. Differences in culture and ways of working can make it harder for digital and IT groups to integrate new digital offerings with core systems. Teams from other business functions can also get confused about which technology groups to work with—and how.
 
An integrated operating model helps resolve these differences by bringing IT and digital organizations into a single model for planning, delivering, and managing technology, reinforced by a shared culture and talent-management approach. In this model, digital and IT specialists work together on unified teams, each centered on an individual product or platform (Exhibit 2).
 
In the integrated tech org model, teams support products, platforms, and infrastructure 
 
  • Product teams: Product teams focus on serving the needs of end users in ways that generate revenue, lift productivity, or otherwise directly create value for a company. They operate like mini-businesses, responsible for go-to-market planning, user experience, and adoption in addition to technology delivery. To carry out this approach, product teams include not only engineers but also designers, analysts, and experts from other business functions, such as operations, marketing, and compliance. Typically, they use agile methods to develop products, iterating rapidly to make improvements. Most product teams will have a leader who is more business oriented than technology oriented.
  • Platform teams: Platform teams focus on making an organization’s core systems accessible, reusable, and modern so that they better enable products. This collaborative approach sometimes calls for platform experts to join product teams temporarily. A platform team will normally adjust its ways of working to match the state of the underlying systems and the needs of product teams and external partners. On most platform teams, the leader will have a technology background, and staff will mainly consist of technology specialists.
  • Infrastructure teams increase efficiency, consistency, stability, security and portability. They have a centralized infrastructure-services team, responsible for provisioning and managing the underlying technology infrastructure in ways that make it efficient, easy to use, reliable, and consistent. By automating activities and promoting standard development, operations, and engineering practices across product and platform teams, the infrastructure-services team continuously streamlines its own work and that of the wider technology organization.
 
To address talent gaps, companies often find it necessary to reskill existing employees or hire additional talent. Product teams, for example, handle all aspects of product development, from design to user adoption, so their leaders must be able to understand users, translate their needs into technical requirements, manage product road maps, guide engineering teams, and oversee releases. Few organizations employ enough technology specialists with experience across these disciplines, so they must either train the people they have or bring in new people who have experience as product managers or product owners.
 
 
(to be continued)
Credits:
  • Mc Kinsey and Company, Andreesen Horovitz, Kleiner Perkins
  • Masters of scale, Reid Hoffman, Greylock Partners 
  • The new moats, Jerry Chen, Greylock Partners 
  • The autonomy ecosystem, Frank Chen, Andreesen Horovitz 

Let me know what you think! 
DM me @philippemora on IG and Twitter
​My name's phil mora and I blog about the things I love: fitness, hacking work, tech and anything holistic. 
​
Head of Digital Product
thinker, doer, designer, coder, leader
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