Spectro Cloud completed a $75 million Series C funding round led by Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives with participation from existing Spectro Cloud investors.
Most enterprises supporting critical software releases tend to understand the importance of setting up a strong release management function. Without this, software releases present both unmanageable risks and complexity. While several software tools have been developed to address these risks, many organizations are selecting tools to manage the release process without considering how they tie into IT service management (ITSM).
The general consensus tends to be that in the world of agile and DevOps, ITSM teams are increasingly being left behind. But the truth is, in more forward-thinking IT organizations, this isn’t the case. ITSM can continue to play an effective role in coordinating and automating production releases. They can play this role once they are integrated with the tools whose focus is on managing the value stream from an idea to the end goal of providing increased production and value.
The fact is that ITSM is playing, or at least should play, a growing role in support of agile and DevOps initiatives. But this role still remains limited due to the fact that DevOps teams, and their management, are (more often than not) leaving them out as a tool of choice and not considering them a point of integration. The goal should be to integrate ITSM into the bigger release management picture under the backing of a more complete system for planning, managing, and governing agile and DevOps activities.
Ensure Integrity of Production Environments
ITSM tools have a proven track record of helping IT Operations ensure the integrity of production environments. Enterprises have matured the processes that unify team members in accomplishing that goal. ITSM tools provide a system that adds rigor around the change process and helps support applications after they go live.
Integrating effective release management will dramatically improve the lives of the operations team by making planning and engineering processes visible. By unifying release tracking, organizations will be able to work together more efficiently by automatically coordinating work items, notifying stakeholders, tracking work items across the entire enterprise portfolio and enabling the use of operation’s matured workflows for both traditional and continuous delivery development processes.
Compare and Contrast
Value stream management (VSM) software offers the critical capability of providing visibility, coordination and collaboration across the entire software delivery pipeline. This view from idea to value insures that application delivery is coordinated across development and operations – giving you true DevOps.
On the other hand, ITSM solutions currently lack the ability to deliver visibility all the way through to the idea phase.
VSM solutions offer visibility across all of the sources needed to assimilate into a common project model. This increased visibility provides the ability for improved communication between groups, and added flexibility, so businesses can adjust organizational structures quickly to respond to timing needs for tasks as they arise.
Even the best ITSM solutions around won’t address all of the intricacies of release management, given that its roots remain in defending the production environment. These solutions are good at incident and change management, but solely depending on ITSM for what is needed in release management is akin to going back to the Dark Ages.
Bringing it All Together
There is no single answer for how to go about an effective DevOps/release management initiative. Rather, IT organizations vary in culture, toolsets, processes and needs. Unifying these extensive options with VSM is key.
No matter how high-powered the ITSM platform of choice may be, there will be a critical need to reach beyond it in coordinating processes, toolsets, and stakeholders across the full enterprise toolchain from idea to value.
However, this shouldn’t imply that the role of ITSM in DevOps should be downplayed, or even that it shouldn’t be expected to grow and evolve, making ITSM a more effective form of communication and automation is greatly beneficial. However, most enterprises will still need a larger array of integration, coordination, and governance for release management initiatives.
As the growth of fast-tracked applications continues to rise, this will become even more so the case, and will result in different teams frequently using a growing array of differing tool sets. Given these trends, quality VSM software will shine in its advantages in unifying IT for the full array of release management tasks. With its ability to be both a complement to ITSM, and as a way of optimizing the value of the ITSM platform within the bigger DevOps picture, these advantages will only continue to be magnified.
Industry News
The Cloud Native Computing Foundation® (CNCF®), which builds sustainable ecosystems for cloud native software, has announced significant momentum around cloud native training and certifications with the addition of three new project-centric certifications and a series of new Platform Engineering-specific certifications:
Red Hat announced the latest version of Red Hat OpenShift AI, its artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) platform built on Red Hat OpenShift that enables enterprises to create and deliver AI-enabled applications at scale across the hybrid cloud.
Salesforce announced agentic lifecycle management tools to automate Agentforce testing, prototype agents in secure Sandbox environments, and transparently manage usage at scale.
OpenText™ unveiled Cloud Editions (CE) 24.4, presenting a suite of transformative advancements in Business Cloud, AI, and Technology to empower the future of AI-driven knowledge work.
Red Hat announced new capabilities and enhancements for Red Hat Developer Hub, Red Hat’s enterprise-grade developer portal based on the Backstage project.
Pegasystems announced the availability of new AI-driven legacy discovery capabilities in Pega GenAI Blueprint™ to accelerate the daunting task of modernizing legacy systems that hold organizations back.
Tricentis launched enhanced cloud capabilities for its flagship solution, Tricentis Tosca, bringing enterprise-ready end-to-end test automation to the cloud.
Rafay Systems announced new platform advancements that help enterprises and GPU cloud providers deliver developer-friendly consumption workflows for GPU infrastructure.
Apiiro introduced Code-to-Runtime, a new capability using Apiiro’s deep code analysis (DCA) technology to map software architecture and trace all types of software components including APIs, open source software (OSS), and containers to code owners while enriching it with business impact.
Zesty announced the launch of Kompass, its automated Kubernetes optimization platform.
MacStadium announced the launch of Orka Engine, the latest addition to its Orka product line.
Elastic announced its AI ecosystem to help enterprise developers accelerate building and deploying their Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) applications.
Red Hat introduced new capabilities and enhancements for Red Hat OpenShift, a hybrid cloud application platform powered by Kubernetes, as well as the technology preview of Red Hat OpenShift Lightspeed.
Traefik Labs announced API Sandbox as a Service to streamline and accelerate mock API development, and Traefik Proxy v3.2.