A community-driven framework for adopting Microsoft Power Platform at scale within enterprise organizations.
Power Platform Adoption Framework is a comprehensive, community-driven framework designed to guide the adoption and implementation of Microsoft Power Platform at scale within enterprise organizations. It provides a structured approach for adoption, buildout, road mapping, enterprise management, and governance, addressing the challenges of deploying low-code platforms in large, complex environments.
Enterprise architects, IT leaders, Power Platform administrators, and citizen developers responsible for implementing and governing Microsoft Power Platform in large organizations.
It offers a proven, community-vetted methodology that has become the global standard for Power Platform adoption, reducing risk and accelerating successful deployment through shared best practices and continuous updates from experts worldwide.
Power Platform Adoption Framework
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Provides a structured, start-to-finish methodology for scaling Power Platform across large organizations, as highlighted in the key features for adoption and roadmapping.
Includes comprehensive guidelines for managing and governing deployments, essential for ensuring compliance and control in enterprise settings, based on community-driven best practices.
Developed with input from global Power Platform experts and citizen developers, ensuring real-world relevance and continuous updates through GitHub discussions and contributions.
Wiki is continuously updated with the latest community ideas, keeping the framework current with evolving best practices, though it remains a draft work-in-progress.
The wiki is always a work-in-progress with periodic scrubs every six months, which can lead to instability and lack of polished, finalized guides for reliable implementation.
Exclusively focused on Microsoft Power Platform, making it unsuitable for organizations using other low-code solutions and creating vendor lock-in risks.
Adopting the full framework requires significant time, resources, and strategic planning, which may be overkill for smaller projects or teams with limited bandwidth.