ALM data strategies that mimic the principles of blockchain

Posted on Friday, November 2, 2018 by CHRISTOPHER POLA

All too often, I hear from customers about a very common pain point: they do not have the data to run their business. It’s not that they lack data, but they lack trust in their data. While solving data issues can be a riddle at times, I believe this dilemma is symptomatic of antiquated and/or misappropriated application lifecycle management (ALM) systems requiring a little more strategic thinking, a little more discipline and some plain old TLC. The pain my customers are identifying is a gap between the process and their systems. If data serves as the common denominator in the people + process + technology equation, then addressing the harmonics of how they all work together might be getting overlooked. To prevent such pains, ideally, the data technology must line up with internal processes to create a solution that will actually solve your data-trust problem and create true business agility. 
Late one evening in the office, our team of Agile Advisors huddled in a conference room discussing how to help organizations make their ALM data strategies more omnipotent. We had just finished a couple of days of client meetings and it was very evident that they all suffered from the pain of not having the right ‘data’ at different phases of their software development lifecycle (SDLC).

The need for enterprise agility becomes more imminent as technology infuses our business models with more speed and complexity. Having feedback loops and improvement cycles that span the entire organization requires a level of trust and accuracy. Without the right data infrastructure, how do you achieve that level of agility?

Achieving enterprise agility

In an effort to find a way to adequately and accurately describe this common issue, I had an epiphany. Could an ALM data strategy that was similar to the benefits of blockchain be the remedy that would alleviate the current pains customers have with their SDLC data? We know that blockchain was designed to remove the uncertainty from trading value. Said another way, the basis of blockchain is to provide trust in transacting value with other parties. All the interactions in the SDLC are about moving value through the pipeline and everyone in a company is transacting to produce ‘value,’ so can we then consider that the very benefits that blockchain provides are exactly the benefits organizations seek in their ALM data infrastructure? 

Let's kick the tires on this a bit more…When organizations develop new products, there are literally thousands, even hundreds of thousands of “transactions,” right? Think of how many conversations take place at each level of planning and with each different stakeholder group. Every agile ceremony, portfolio planning discussion, or program or team planning activity results in a transaction of sorts. A lot of trading and transacting occurs within the discovery and planning hemisphere. Add to this – if you dare – all of the activities that happen during the engineering and execution phases – the activities around source code management, pull-requests, merge/builds, CI/CD, testing, security reviews, operations. Then add in all of the corporate functions of marketing, legal, finance, education, sales, support and so on. All of these types of “transactions” take place minute by minute, day by day, week by week, etc., and if you’re not able to either a) obtain a list of all these transactions easily; b) make sense of how all these transactions are related; or c) if you do not trust this data, then how resilient and agile can your product discovery and product delivery phases actually be? (By resilient, I mean anti-fragile and an organization that can deliver better outcomes when variability is introduced). 
The point is there are a lot of transactions that need to be managed. All organizations are aware that they need data to achieve their key business objectives, but what they lack is the ability to trust their current data infrastructure and they spend money to harness, prepare, review, decipher, interpret and manage whatever data is available, yet with little improvement in the trust factor.

An ALM data infrastructure that acts like blockchain

To set this up properly, let’s revisit the earlier analogy of an ALM data infrastructure that mimics the benefits of a blockchain. A sound ALM data infrastructure would remove the need for intermediaries (manual spreadsheets, data management and collation, thereby reducing costs) and supports the flow of value, which in our world is working software and any transaction that supports the principles of agile. Establishing an ALM system that mimics the three blockchain tenets from start to finish in the SDLC  – identity, transparency and governance – can remedy the pain everyone experiences when there is a gap between your organizational-wide processes and your data. If becoming an agile business is important to you, then invest time in a data strategy and infrastructure that will be ubiquitous with the benefits that blockchain provides.

Conclusion

In summary, please do not dismiss the importance of data. Data matters, period. By virtue of how a blockchain works – linking of transactions and standardization in how the transactional data is defined – an ALM data infrastructure that employs these same principles will allow you to mature quicker on your transformation journey. This has to be said too: Don’t fear data standardization. It does not limit the autonomy or creativity of the people and processes; but rather, it enables trust around all the activities/transactions that are happening and that trust is the basis for business agility. Taking it further, an ALM data strategy and infrastructure that provides discipline around the data will help any organization make the leap into machine learning, predictive analytics, AI and what lies ahead on the technology highway.

More App Developer News

Tether QVAC SDK Powers AI Across Devices and Platforms



APAC 5G expansion to fuel 347B mobile market by 2030



How AI is causing app litter everywhere



The App Economy Is Thriving



NIKKE 3.5 anniversary update livestream coming soon



New AI tool targets early dementia detection



Jentic launch gives AI agents api access



Experts warn ai-generated health content risks misinterpretation without human oversight



Ludo.ai Unveils API and MCP Beta to Power AI Game Asset Pipelines



AccuWeather Launches ChatGPT Integration for Live Weather Updates



Stop Using Business Jargon: 5 Ways Buzzwords Damage Job Performance



IT spending rises as banks balance legacy and innovation



Tech hiring slumps as Software Developer job postings fall



AI is becoming more widespread in collaboration tools



FCC prohibits new foreign router models citing critical infrastructure risks



ChatGPT Carbon Footprint Matches 1.3 Million Cars Report Finds



Lens Launches MCP Server to Connect AI Coding Assistants with Kubernetes



Accelerating corporate ai investment returns



Enviromates tech startup launches global participation platform



Private Repository Secures the AI-driven Development Boom



UK Fintech Platform Enviromates Connects Projects Brands and Consumers



Env Zero and CloudQuery Announce Merger



How Industrial AI Is Transforming Operations in 2026



AI generated work from managers is damaging trust among employees



Foresight Secures $25M to Bridge Infrastructure Execution Gap



Copyright © 2026 by Moonbeam

Address:
1855 S Ingram Mill Rd
STE# 201
Springfield, Mo 65804

Phone: 1-844-277-3386

Fax:417-429-2935

E-Mail: contact@appdevelopermagazine.com