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Templates for popular drawing and diagramming tools to represent the team types and team interaction modes in Team Topologies

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Team Shape Templates

Templates for popular drawing and diagramming software tools to represent the team types and team interaction modes in Team Topologies.

Based on some of the ideas in the book Team Topologies by Matthew Skelton @matthewskelton and Manuel Pais @manupaisable.

See teamtopologies.com for more details about Team Topologies.

Copyright © 2018-2021 Team Topologies - Licenced under CC BY-SA 4.0 CC BY-SA 4.0

Printed and printable shapes available

Get printed, pre-cut versions of these team modeling shapes via Agile Stationery. These shapes are designed by the authors of Team Topologies; they are printed on high-quality card stock, and ready-cut for immediate use. CC BY-SA license.

Photo of pre-cut printed modeling shapes

A self-printable PDF version of the card team modeling shapes is also available to download (but you will need to cut the shapes yourself using scissors or a craft knife). CC BY-SA license.

Principles for using the shapes - both printed and digital

When using the team shapes to create your own diagrams there are a number of constraints that should be applied:

  • There is always an implied flow of change from left to right in the diagram (with apologies to people more familiar with a right-to-left flow!).
  • A key aspect of Stream-aligned teams is that they have end-to-end responsibility for a flow of change to the live services/systems, with no hand-offs to other teams. There should therefore be no other team between a Stream-aligned team and their customers/users (on the right of the diagram).
  • Team shapes should be solid to represent their long-lived nature.
  • Interaction mode shapes should be 50% transparency to represent the more short-lived nature of the interaction.
  • Stream-aligned teams should generally never provide an X-as-a-Service directly. Instead, data or services from the Stream-aligned team should be made available "as a Service" via a platform of some kind.
  • If an X-as-a-Service or Collaboration interaction crosses over multiple teams, it may be appropriate to use an black asterisk "*" to clarify which teams are interacting

Remember these guidelines:

  • Use diagrams as a starting point for meaningful discussion; they are visuals to drive conversations around needs and evolution.
  • Any diagrams you create will be a "snapshot" of your current landscape; use them to visualize and present potential issues that may need to be addressed.

Designed for color vision deficiency

The shapes have been designed with the specific intention of being usable by everyone including those that may have a color vision deficiency. For this reason, the following constraints should apply:

  • Platform teams should always have square corners
  • Stream-aligned teams should always be horizontally aligned with rounded corners
  • Enabling teams should always be vertically aligned with rounded corners
  • Complicated subsystem teams should always be an octagon
  • Collaboration should be indicated using a parallelogram
  • Facilitation should be represented using a circle
  • X-as-a-Service should be represented with a triangle, with the point of the triangle indicating the direction of the service being provided

The following images were generated using this color blindness simulator:

Normal Proto Deutero Tritano Monochrome
Normal Dichromatic Protanopia Dichromatic Deuteranopia Dichromatic Tritanopia Monochromatic Achromatopsia

Key differences from the shapes in the book

The image below is an example of the shapes you may have seen in the book. You may notice that there are some clear differences between the shapes shown above and those you may have previously seen in the book. There are a number of reasons for this which are explained below.

Book Shapes Tool Shapes
Book shapes example Recreated book shapes example
  • The X-as-a-Service interaction is a grey triangle instead of two white bars joining the two teams. The reason for the difference here is two-fold. First, the shape defined in the book does not indicate the direction of the interaction being provided; the point of the triangle now determines this (the triangle points towards the "customer" in the relationship). Second, the shape representing the X-as-a-Service interaction in the book was very difficult to re-create in a number of different diagramming tools; using a simple triangle makes this much easier.
  • The Collaboration interaction is a parallelogram instead of a hatched square. Recreating the hatching in different diagramming tools was problematic so this was changed to use a parallelogram.
  • The Facilitation interaction mode is a plain circle instead of a circle with dots. Recreating the dots in different diagramming tools was problematic so this was changed to use a circle.

Available Team Shapes

Currently supported

  • All shapes for the four fundamental team types (Stream-aligned, Enabling, Complicated Subsystem, and Platform)
  • X-as-a-Service, Collaboration and Facilitation interaction modes
  • Flow of change

Screenshot of Team Topologies shape library in diagrams.net

The team shapes are currently available for the following tools:

draw.io / diagrams.net

See TeamTopologies.xml in the diagrams.net folder. This creates a Library with several shapes. The shapes are named - hover over a shape to see the description:

Usage

You have a couple of options, simply click the following link to pre-load the library:

Or

  • Download TeamTopologies.xml from this repository
  • Open diagrams.net in a browser
  • File -> Open Library from -> Device
  • Select the file TeamTopologies.xml

A new shape library should appear.

Google Draw

Open the template at Team Topologies Template for modelling - Google Draw and choose Make a copy

Then copy/paste the shapes as needed into Google Draw or Google Slides if needed.

Google Slides

Open the template at Team Topologies Template for modelling - Google Slides and choose Make a copy

PowerPoint

Download the template from the Team Topologies Template for modelling - PowerPoint and start editing as needed

Miro

  • Download the latest release of the Team Topologies Template for modelling - Miro package
  • Open Miro and click on Upload from backup
  • This will create a new board called Restored Team Topologies template for modelling - Miro
  • Then simply rename the board and start using it by copy and pasting the different shapes as required

See the Miro Readme for more details on how to edit the shapes for Miro.

Contributing

Here are some guidelines to follow if you would like to contribute a shape set for your favourite modelling tool:

Colors and Styles

Where possible the shapes should adhere to the following scheme:

Shape Name Fill (#RGB) Fill Transparency Outline (#RGB) Outline Style Outline Weight
Stream-aligned team #FFEDB8 0% #FFD966 Solid 2px
Enabling team #DFBDCF 0% #D09CB7 Solid 2px
Complicated Subsystem team #FFC08B 0% #E88814 Solid 2px
Platform team #B7CDF1 0% #B7CDF1 Solid 2px
Collaboration #C6BEDF 50% #967EE2 Dashed 2px
Facilitation #C9DFBE 50% #78996B Dashed 2px
X-as-a-Service #B4B4B4 50% #999696 Dashed 2px

The contrast of the shapes will be better on a white background.

Shape Re-sizing

The following table shows some typically re-sizing actions that may be performed by the user, any shapes created should support this type of re-sizing.

Shape Type Example
Stream-aligned and Platform teams will typically be re-sized horizontally.
They may increase in size vertically to indicate the size of the team relative to others.
Re-sizing shapes
Enabling teams are typically re-sized vertically.
They may increase in size horizontally to accommodate the name of the team.
Re-sizing shapes
Complicated subsystem teams are typically re-sized both horizontally and vertically in order to accommodate the team name. Re-sizing shapes

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Templates for popular drawing and diagramming tools to represent the team types and team interaction modes in Team Topologies

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