The New Stack Podcast

Removing Cultural Impediments To DevOps Uptake With Chef

Episode Summary

At ChefConf 2018 in Chicago in late May, we sat down with Chef CTO and co-founder Adam Jacob, and Senior VP of Products and Engineering Corey Scobie, to discuss the cultural currents in the enterprise. Specifically, they focused on the proliferation of DevOps and DevOps tools within the business community. One of the things that is potentially a roadblock for uptake of DevOps in the enterprise has been the internal culture of many organizations. With so many new ideas and tools out there, it can feel like your company doesn't get it at all, and even perhaps fears DevOps. Jacob said that the whole IT organization inside of an enterprise must change to properly embrace DevOps, and he said this must even extend to the opinion IT has of itself. If an organization is doing the wrong thing, or is impeding the uptake of DevOps, said Jacob, administrators and IT workers must push to change those impediments, not resign themselves this being the state of things forever and always. "When you know something's not right in the world, in your company, in your organization, or whatever, you have two choices. You go back to work and you accept that, or you go back to work and you do something about it. One of the themes we've been talking about this week is that IT needs to change their thinking in the enterprise to continue to be successful and relevant, and to actually serve the business," said Corey Scobie, Senior Vice President of Product and Engineering at Chef. Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WPx6M0fzO0

Episode Notes

At ChefConf 2018 in Chicago in late May, we sat down with Chef CTO and co-founder Adam Jacob, and Senior VP of Products and Engineering Corey Scobie, to discuss the cultural currents in the enterprise. Specifically, they focused on the proliferation of DevOps and DevOps tools within the business community. One of the things that is potentially a roadblock for uptake of DevOps in the enterprise has been the internal culture of many organizations. With so many new ideas and tools out there, it can feel like your company doesn't get it at all, and even perhaps fears DevOps.

Jacob said that the whole IT organization inside of an enterprise must change to properly embrace DevOps, and he said this must even extend to the opinion IT has of itself. If an organization is doing the wrong thing, or is impeding the uptake of DevOps, said Jacob, administrators and IT workers must push to change those impediments, not resign themselves this being the state of things forever and always.

"When you know something's not right in the world, in your company, in your organization, or whatever, you have two choices. You go back to work and you accept that, or you go back to work and you do something about it. One of the themes we've been talking about this week is that IT needs to change their thinking in the enterprise to continue to be successful and relevant, and to actually serve the business," said Corey Scobie, Senior Vice President of Product and Engineering at Chef.

Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WPx6M0fzO0