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Culture

▾ 4 MINUTE READ — CLOSE

Organizational culture impacts the success of every company and determines the approach taken by each team. Building the right culture in your software engineering company is essential because individuals make up your teams — even if you deal with codes — and the company environment directly influences team members’ work ethic and workplace experience.

Good culture and community at any enterprise attract top talent. This approach allows a company to have skilled and invaluable team members who bring diverse and innovative ideas that move the organization forward.

Team culture promotes collective effort and cooperation between team members.

The New Stack’s coverage of this topic looks at how cultural forces positively or negatively influence cloud-native computing, DevOps, and other modern information technology practices.

Job Sharing Can Help Retain Tech Workers. But It’s Not Easy.

5 Steps to Creating a Software Engineering Team Culture

Creating an influential organizational culture is not limited to the software development industry. However, our coverage focuses on how to improve a software development company structure and other guiding workplace culture principles.

IT culture is vital because it affects execution and the work environment. Culture and community also shape the future direction of any company.

Here are five steps to follow when building a progressive software company culture:

Grow your current culture. Building an excellent corporate culture doesn’t mean the existing culture is negative. Bearing the company’s direction in mind, leaders can carry out an audit and retain certain aspects of the current culture. An audit will highlight areas of improvement and parts of the company’s culture that are not progressive.

Communicate value. Now more than ever, people are looking to find meaning behind anything they do, especially at work. Helping team members see the value behind their work and the company’s overall objectives promotes job satisfaction. Communicating value can influence the effort and zeal of the entire staff.

Promote positivity. A good software company culture centers around positivity. Leaders should encourage employees to use positive language, express gratitude, respect others and exhibit these traits.

Create goals. Setting goals helps all teams have specific short-term and long-term objectives and a clear company direction. Without goals, team members and company leaders do not work towards anything. Leaders should work with team members and develop SMART goals that move the company forward.

Is Tech’s 4-Day Work Week Coming? Not Yet, but Stay Tuned.

Pay attention to health. Mental, emotional, and physical fitness is vital to the success of any company. When team members feel valued and see that leaders are concerned about their well-being, their productivity is likely to increase, positively impacting the organization.

Benefits of Adopting a DevOps Culture

DevOps combines practices, tools, and processes that enable an organization to achieve goals by integrating development and operation teams. Fostering a strong DevOps culture helps to improve the software development life cycle because it eliminates long lead times.

Benefits of adopting a DevOps culture in your software engineering company include:

Increased efficiency. A DevOps culture promotes technological devices that save time and increase efficiency among team members. DevOps automation culture identifies bugs and other issues with code and enables developers to carry out hotfixes and rollbacks.

Job satisfaction. Instead of a rule-based or power-based culture, one of the DevOps core principles is to take a performance-based approach. This approach allows employees to improve and utilize their skills resulting in a better workforce. Software companies can invest in their staff by offering them industry-recognized DevOps training. Giving employees opportunities to develop their skills helps to increase their job satisfaction.

Reduced risk of failure. Another DevOps core principle is fast and frequent software releases. Using the DevOps approach in development and deployment, teams can reduce the risk of outright crashes as changes are made quickly to issues detected in the software. The DevOps methodology ensures that development and operation teams are involved in the product life cycle. DevOps core principles reduce communication gaps between concerned teams and minimize the risk of product failure.

Collaboration. Rather than focusing on individual team achievements and goals, a DevOps culture ensures that development and operation teams work together to achieve their goals. This approach promotes efficiency and cooperation. It also enhances the development atmosphere and software company culture.

Easier recovery from unsuccessful deployments. The DevOps methodology reduces the change failure rate to about 15% or less and helps teams recover from failure faster. When the required code changes can be made within one unit, solutions can be implemented quickly. Delay is reduced as fixes do not need to pass through the software company’s employee hierarchy. Teams can work in small increments and implement trunk-based developments and test automation strategies. This approach helps the department recover faster from failures and improves the overall performance of an organization.

Investing in the Next Generation of Tech Talent

The Impact of Institutional Bias

Another topic we discuss in our coverage of IT culture is institutional bias, which is a tendency for institutions to operate in a certain way that favors a specific group of people. Some software companies and development shops struggle with inclusivity, much to the loss of the industry. We want to shed light on unpopular issues and help organizations act in the right direction. An example is creating an inclusive culture within organizations. If computing is for all people, everyone should be represented in its creation.

At The New Stack, we look at how culture impacts technology choice and how good business and development practices can benefit the operation of cloud-native systems. We also discuss open-source, as independent developers spar with large cloud companies over the rights and responsibilities of open-source software. How open-source culture impacts organizational operations is another ongoing topic of interest.

Agile software development, delivery, and iteration are some other concepts we examine at The New Stack.

Learn more about organizational culture:

How to Achieve Product-Market Fit in a Downturn

Entrepreneurship for Engineers: Solo Founder or Co-Founder?

US Cities Try Luring Remote Tech Workers with Cash


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Culture / DevOps Tools / IoT Edge Computing
Off-The-Shelf Hacker: Raspberry Pi vs. Arduino
15 Jun 2019 6:00am, by drtorq
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When AI Gains God Status: AE Currie’s ‘Utopia Five’
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12 Jun 2019 9:11am, by Nočnica Fee
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11 Jun 2019 5:00pm, by Joab Jackson and B. Cameron Gain
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Culture
The New York Times’ Op-Eds from the Future
9 Jun 2019 6:00am, by David Cassel
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7 Jun 2019 10:23am, by Mike Melanson
Culture / Kubernetes
Party Circuit: Happy ‘Boothday’ Kubernetes!
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Brendan Burns on Building Open Source Communities
6 Jun 2019 3:00am, by Susan Hall
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How to Get More People of Color to Join (and Stay) in Tech
5 Jun 2019 3:00am, by Jennifer Riggins
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Your Next Security Hire Might Need to Be a Developer
4 Jun 2019 11:30am, by Hillel Solow
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How VisiCalc’s Spreadsheets Changed the World
2 Jun 2019 6:00am, by David Cassel
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Party Circuit: KubeCon + CloudNativeCon + Barcelona + Paella + Estrella Damm…
31 May 2019 11:05am, by Norris Deajon
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The Customer Experience: Why Businesses Must Modernize Their Database Systems
30 May 2019 9:47am, by J Chris Anderson
Culture / Data Science
OASIS Combines Open Source and Open Standards with Open Projects
28 May 2019 1:00pm, by Mike Melanson
Culture
Julia Evans’ Bite-Size Zines Break It Down
27 May 2019 9:00am, by TC Currie
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Off-The-Shelf Hacker: Simulate Sensor Data with an Arduino
25 May 2019 6:00am, by drtorq
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Culture / Software Development
WordPress Co-Founder Mike Little on the Importance of Open Source
20 May 2019 5:00pm, by Jennifer Riggins
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HTTP 404 Not Found: Web Developers Make an Art Form from Error Messages
19 May 2019 6:00am, by David Cassel
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Off-The-Shelf Hacker: Throw a Thermocouple on the Grill
18 May 2019 6:00am, by drtorq
Culture
Merico Devises Analytics to Assess Developer Code Contributions
16 May 2019 11:06am, by Mike Melanson
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Hello Tractor: An App-Driven Ecosystem for Tractor-Sharing
15 May 2019 8:32am, by Susan Hall
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Secure Your IoT Deployment During the Security Talent Shortage
14 May 2019 4:00am, by Galen Hunt
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Building the Woke Web: Accessibility and Social Justice in Software Development
13 May 2019 3:00pm, by Jennifer Riggins
Culture / Software Development / Technology
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12 May 2019 3:00am, by David Cassel
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