DevOpsDays brings two-day grassroots tech conference back to Kansas City
October 16, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
DevOpsDays KC is returning this week with an open spaces concept wherein audience members at the two-day conference vote on the topics to cover in real time, said Ryan McNair. Topics with the most votes create zones in the space in which the audience can flow freely from each area.
“If you don’t like it, walk away. You’ve got to go find someone else and talk to them instead. And so it creates this really interesting dynamic of people floating and mingling,” said McNair, an organizer of DevOpsDays and technical product owner at SMRxT. “I had one person describe it as a cathartic experience.”
The event — planned for Wednesday and Thursday at Plexpod Westport Commons — is positioned to let attendees start the week at work, he said, then go back to their offices with knowledge to apply.
“[You go] back on Friday, bring back what you learned, really talk about it, and apply it right away before you forget some stuff on the weekend,” McNair said. “So really it’s trying to bring that education part, and design all these different parts to really make that high quality.”
The conference is expected to show the upward trajectory of the tech industry in Kansas City, he said.
“[Tech leaders outside KC] don’t just see a headline about [KC’s tech scene], but they’re like, ‘They’re having these talks, they’re having these people, they have this audience,’ and it keeps putting us on the map,” he added.
The opening keynote is expected to be simulcast across the globe from a KC stage, said McNair, as part of the All Day DevOps virtual conference, a worldwide 24-hour live conference online, which is set for Thursday.
“[All Day DevOps] says they follow the sun. The talks happen in time zones around the globe,” he added.
DevOpsDays in Kansas City is modeled after a framework that began in Belgium in 2009. Aaron Blythe, a software architect at Cerner, began a meetup group in 2013 to build the DevOps community in KC, said McNair.
The event organizing team is 11 people, though the meetup group, which meets 10 times throughout the year, has since grown to 1,100 people, he said.
“Our group is driven by all these positive comments from the community,” he added. “We’ve been working hard year-round for the past three years, in addition to our day jobs, to make this type of education and learning accessible to organizations of all sizes in KC, not just the ones that can afford to spend $5,000 sending one or two people to a conference on the East or West coasts. I’m really proud of the team we have formed and the community we have cultivated.”
In 2019, the plan is to turn the group into a nonprofit, so the organizers can channel the excess money after an event into creating scholarships or funding other meetup groups, said McNair.
“If we can help with that, and be more of a administrative nonprofit group, then it just makes things a lot better for all these little groups,” he said. “Having that nonprofit organization gives us the ability to do that and focus not just on the conference. Then our monthly meetup can be a little more formal each month.”
Click below to learn more about DevOps.

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Black & Veatch delivers first consumer product ever: Solarhood
After more than 100 years in business, engineering giant Black & Veatch has launched its first consumer product: Solarhood. Built through the B&V Growth Accelerator program, the company created Solarhood to streamline the process for homeowners to tap solar power. The Solarhood mobile and web-based app allow homeowners to access the feasibility of going solar,…
Two KC EdTech startups earn spots in latest LEANLAB cohort; launch set for August
It’s a highly selective process to join the fifth LEANLAB K-12 fellowship, said Katie Boody, but two Kansas City startups made the cut. K12 Perform and Base Academy of Music will join four other cohort members — hailing from the Midwest to Washington D.C. — in the August-to-November EdTech accelerator program. LEANLAB is partnering…
HechoKC cast in hand-made image of Chicano artist’s culture, family, community
Witnessing — and participating in — Kansas City’s renaissance has been amazing, said Luis Garcia, the longtime artist behind HechoKC. The Crossroads used to be a ghost town, said Garcia, who has been part of the KC scene since his years at the Kansas City Art Institute. He developed SPYN Studio, a branding and design…
Quartet of startups hop into the Digital Sandbox KC
Four early-stage businesses recently entered the Digital Sandbox KC program. The new startups demonstrate the ingenuity Digital Sandbox aims to attract for its grant-funding efforts, said Jeff Shackelford, director of Digital Sandbox KC. “From helping students prepare for college to analyzing voting records to predict legislative outcomes, the startups in the Sandbox are a great…
