Week of Learning DevOps, with the Flavor of Sales Secrets.
Hey, friends welcome back to my weekly newsletter, I hope you are doing well. I don't know how to shape that week into one headline, so I am giving this headline to this week's newsletter.
"Week of Learning DevOps, with the Flavor of Sales Secret". The reason behind this I'll explain further down the line.
SALE SECRETS
As I also discussed in the previous newsletter I am currently reading a book named "Copywriting Secrets" to improve my sales writing. The author claimed that nobody cared about you in your sales copy, they only care about their problems and want solutions from your products or services. Also, no one here to read your sales copies if your headline sucks, so keep 50% focus on your copy headline and the rest on other stuff like (text ads, video ads, and webpage ads). The author also shares some headline templates which are proven.
But this blew my mind: It's NEVER "one size fits all". The author suggests segmenting your target traffic into three segments, Hot, Warm, and Cold.
Hot: Somebody who knows you like (in your email list, on social media).
Warm: Somebody looking for the solution to a problem but doesn't know about you.
Cold: They don't even know that their problems have solutions.
LEARNING DEVOPS
If you are a software developer this is a more exciting segment. So basically I recently started learning DevOps from one of my most recommended platforms Coursera. This week I successfully completed my first week of learning.
What did I learn this week?
DevOps is the strategy or culture, not a toolbox. We have software development models like WaterFall, Xtreme Programming, and Agile. I am not going into much detail about these models in that particular newsletter (in the future yes), DevOps have three dimensions (Culture, Tools, and Methods) but the most important is culture if you have to be DevOps. Culture means organizational culture. As Agile makes developers more flexible to do their tasks in sprints using scrum methodology but they work in siloes from the operations team, DevOps comes up with a culture where developers and the operations team work together.
That's it from my side. Please give me constructive feedback for more improvement in my current content, signing off...