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Metrics that matter: How to prove the business value of DevEx

Дата публикации: 23-02-2026 00:00:00

Developer experience (DevEx) is often dismissed as a "soft" cultural metric. But I can prove to you that DevEx is a reliable predictor of whether your developer platform will actually deliver business value.I’ve noticed a recurring pattern where companies invest millions in a state-of-the-art container platform or cloud infrastructure, only to find their delivery speed hasn't budged. This is the "empty cluster problem." It happens because the focus was entirely on the infrastructure and not on the interface between that infrastructure and the people using it.The growth advantageWhen you impr

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Jason Froehlich

Developer experience (DevEx) is often dismissed as a "soft" cultural metric. But I can prove to you that DevEx is a reliable predictor of whether your developer platform will actually deliver business value.

I’ve noticed a recurring pattern where companies invest millions in a state-of-the-art container platform or cloud infrastructure, only to find their delivery speed hasn't budged. 

This is the "empty cluster problem." 

It happens because the focus was entirely on the infrastructure and not on the interface between that infrastructure and the people using it.

The growth advantage

When you improve the developer experience, you aren't just making people happier. You're clearing the path for the company to make more money. If you need a bottom-line reason to take this seriously, look at the data. In 2020, McKinsey did a massive study on "developer velocity" and the results were eye-opening. The research shows that "best-in-class tools are a top contributor to business success," increasing developer productivity, visibility, and coordination. They found that companies that actually empower their developers grow their revenue 4-5x faster than the laggards in their industry. These top-tier performers aren't just shipping code more often, they see 60% higher total returns for shareholders and much healthier operating margins. Being developer-centric isn't some HR initiative. It is a massive engine for growth. 

The foundation before the AI hype

We’re in the midst of a rush toward integrating AI into the software development life cycle (SDLC). While the promise of AI-driven productivity is real, there is a hard truth many organizations are overlooking. AI is a force multiplier, but it multiplies what you already have, including your weaknesses.

If your software delivery process is fragmented, manual, and riddled with "shadow IT," adding AI will only help you generate technical debt faster. You cannot feed an AI model "garbage" data (unstructured workflows, inconsistent deployment patterns, and manual ticketing logs) and expect high-quality, automated outcomes.

A solid DevEx foundation ensures that your SDLC is standardized, making it an essential prerequisite for any AI-augmented development strategy that actually works.

Metrics that prove the case

To prove the business case for DevEx, we have to look past the surface and measure the friction that actually kills productivity:

1. Software delivery performance (DORA)

These are the industry gold standards for a reason. They measure the health of your delivery pipeline:

  • Lead time to change: The time from code commit to production deployment.
  • Deployment frequency: How often you are delivering new features to users.
  • Change failure rate: The quality of those deployments, measured by rollbacks.
  • Mean time to restore (MTTR): Your organization's stability and resilience.

2. The cost of friction (flow efficiency)

This is where the business value is most visible. We look at the ratio of active work time versus wait time. If a developer spends 4 hours coding a feature but it sits in a "security review" ticket queue for 4 days, your flow efficiency is abysmal. Identifying these bottlenecks allows us to quantify the literal cost of developer frustration.

3. Platform adoption and sentiment

A platform is a product, and your developers are the customers. We measure success by:

  • Adoption rate: How quickly teams are migrating to the new platform.
  • Lead time for onboarding: The speed at which a new user or team can become productive on the platform.
  • Net promoter scores/satisfaction scores: Are developers happy with the platform? Would they recommend it or are they bypassing the platform because it's too cumbersome?

How to anchor your strategy

The shift from a "build it and they will come" mentality to a "product-led platform" is difficult to manage alone. This is why we created the Red Hat Developer Experience Assessment. We don’t start with a sales pitch for more tools, we start by working directly with your developers, helping uncover their most frustrating workflow bottlenecks.

We spend time in the trenches with your teams to map out the application onboarding process. We look for the "scars" in the workflow, like the 15 different tools that don't talk to each other and the manual hand-offs that kill momentum. We'll work with you to develop a roadmap that prioritizes high-impact use cases, helping move you from a reactive "keeping the lights on" state to a proactive environment where your platform provides reusable, self-service building blocks.

The professional verdict

Building a great developer experience is the prerequisite for everything that follows, be it platform engineering, cloud-native transformation, or AI. By getting the foundation right today, you'll help your technical investments translate into the growth and business results that the market demands.

Developer perception makes or breaks a platform. If the experience is poor, developers will find a way around it, creating security risks and silos. If the experience is frictionless, your developer platform becomes a catalyst for innovation.

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Классификация: Мнения. Схожих патентов: 0. Схожих новостей: 10. Тональность: 5. Информативность: 8. Источник: www.redhat.com.