ADRs as a Tool to Build Empowered Teams

In a couple of Trustbit projects the teams introduced Architecture Decision Records (https://github.com/joelparkerhenderson/architecture_decision_record) a while ago. In this blog post I want to summarize what team rules were defined for writing, reviewing and storing ADRs and will discuss the implications of these rules and why I believe that these rules work as a tool to build empowered teams.

What’s an ADR

An ADR in short is a well documented architecture decision process. An ADR does not require any special template or place to store it. I recommended that each ADR contains at least an ID (for example 0001-use-vuex-as-state-store), title, date, status, context, decision and consequences.

The ID allows to reference the ADR for example in a commit message. The title acts as a short summary of the decision, the status documents the state of the decision, context describes why there was a need for a decision, the decision part describes the outcome and consequences what to expect from the decision.

I prefer to store ADRs “near the architecture”. I prefer storing ADRs in Git as Git gives you a history for free, to further explore the history of the decision making process.

I try to keep the template as simple as possible to make it easy for every team member to learn how to write an ADRs. As a consequence I used only 3 status: “pending” (in discussion, not yet approved), “approved” (the whole team commits to that decision), “obsolete” (the decision was declined or is just not relevant anymore or superseded by another decision). In the team I’m currently working we’re evaluating if a fourth status “declined” will help in understanding the architecture decision history or just make things more complicated.

ADR Team Rules

Some of these ADR rules were decided on by the team, some of these rules were never stated but implicitly agreed by the teams by following the rules. The team did created three simple rules:

Every team member can file an ADR

  • Every team member has the opportunity to actively shape the architecture.

  • Architecture decisions can be done more quickly.

  • The team itself defines what architecture is and what not.

  • There is no ivory tower architect involved.

  • A decision taking mechanism has be be setup to guide architecture decisions.

  • Decision making process can be fully asynchronous which is a good idea in distributed teams.

An ADR has to be reviewed by every team member

  • Everyone in the team is informed of architecture decisions.

  • Makes onboarding team members easier because they can understand what decisions where taken, when and why.

  • Decreases the bus factor in certain areas of the software because (architecture) information is the first step to understand the code.

  • Reduces information gap between backend and frontend teams. It’s one architecture and every team member should have the full information about the architecture.

  • Reduces team splits and silos, for example in backend and frontend teams.

Store ADRs in Git

  • ADRs are bound to the architecture.

  • Not just the decision but the whole decision process is versioned (ADR was filed, accepted, made obsolete) and can be viewed by just “git log”.

  • PRs for proposing ADRs can be used for discussions if the team is using Github, Bitbucket or the like.

Team Impact

In some project setups, that have a (non coding) software architect role I made the observation that these teams fall short when it comes to engagement, commitment or delivering value.

I believe that this shortcoming is introduced by the lack of autonomy of the team members to decide on the software architecture.

Let’s take a look at a definition of empowered teams and how key attributes of this definition are related to the ADR rules.

Empowered teams are self-sufficient groups of people working together with specific goals. They have the corporate authority, experience, responsibility and skills to enact their own decisions for the organization.

https://www.qualitydigest.com/mar99/html/body_teams.html

For me, the key attributes in this definition are “authority”, “experience”, “responsibility” and “skill” to take decisions. While the definition above focuses on a broader corporate scope, I focus on a more narrow software architecture scope.

I believe that “Every team member can file an ADR” is an opportunity to grant authority (on the architecture level but not on a corporate level) to the team and learn to architect a solution and thus leverage experience. I learned that an agreed decision process has to be established by the team to deliver the quality “architecture decisions can be done more quickly” and to prevent important architecture decisions to be stale and undecided for a long time.

While I wanted to enforce that “there is no ivory tower architect involved”, I see a strong need for a decision maker role that is empowered by the team to take decisions if no consensus or compromise can be established.

As a counterpart to “Every team member can file an ADR” the rule “An ADR has to be reviewed by every team member” gives every team member a (limited) responsibility for decisions and increases architecture skill.

Team members learn from other team members how to get an architecture decision started and how architecture is done. What does architecture solve? Are there always architectural downsides when taking a decision?

I learned that “reducing the team split” is not as simple as “ADRs will reduce the team split by magic”. Ensure that every team understands the implications of an architectural decision. It should be a daily habit to make sure that team members do not start accepting ADRs because of a “this is not their area” attitude. This behavior is a clear sign that team members do not feel responsible for the software as a whole to work correctly but feel only responsible for their limited area of work.

Summary

If you’re in an architecture role I strongly recommend to take a look at ADRs as an alternative to writing (big upfront) architectural documentation. I recommend you use (or at least start with) a simple ADR template as proposed by Michael Nygard ( http://thinkrelevance.com/blog/2011/11/15/documenting-architecture-decisions). Ensure that teams make and record architecture decisions and that those decisions are read, discussed and understood by the team rather than just blindly accepted. With a working architecture decision process based on ADRs you can drive team qualities as authority, experience, responsibility and skill in an architecture context.


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