The Unicorn Project: A Novel About Digital Disruption, Redshirts, and Rebelling Against the Ancient Powerful Order product image

The Unicorn Project: A Novel About Digital Disruption, Redshirts, and Rebelling Against the Ancient Powerful Order

(5/5)
Review by Joshua Morris on
View on Amazon

Review

The Unicorn Project is The Phoenix Project from the developer's perspective, and it's the book I wish I'd read when I was drowning in technical debt. Kim tells the story of a developer trying to ship features while fighting against bureaucracy, legacy systems, and cognitive load. The book's focus on developer experience and platform engineering resonated deeply—I've been the developer who can't get a local environment set up, who has to wait days for infrastructure changes, who can't test code because the test suite is broken. The chapter on the five ideals—locality and simplicity, focus and flow, improvement of daily work, psychological safety, and customer focus—gave me a framework for advocating for better tooling and processes. The story shows how small wins—fixing the test suite, automating deployments, reducing cognitive load—build momentum. My only critique is that some of the solutions feel too easy compared to real-world constraints, but the principles are sound. I've recommended it to developers who feel stuck in bureaucratic organizations, and it's helped them see that change is possible, even if it's slow.

✓ Pros

  • Developer-centered story that resonates with anyone fighting technical debt
  • Five ideals provide framework for advocating better tooling and processes
  • Shows how small wins build momentum for larger changes
  • Companion to The Phoenix Project with different perspective

✗ Cons

  • Some solutions feel too easy compared to real-world constraints
  • Story format may not appeal to readers who prefer technical depth
  • Assumes organizations are willing to change—not always realistic

Specifications

Pages352
PublisherIT Revolution
LanguageEnglish
Isbn13978-1942788768
Publication DateNovember 26, 2019