Stop debating your domain in endless meetings. In 2 days, the team models the business together — Big Picture, Process, and Design — and walks out with a map of your domain ready to become architecture and backlog.
In EventStorming + DDD, the conversation between product, engineering, and domain experts becomes visible, auditable, and linkable to the backlog.
You run the technique on your domain during the workshop and leave with the Big Picture, detailed processes, bounded contexts, and a consolidated ubiquitous language — ready to take on the next architecture decision without guesswork.
Your team will walk out with hands-on command of what every team runs into when it starts modeling its domain seriously. We work through each of these questions methodically.
The objective and financial criteria for when the technique actually shortens the discovery cycle.
The three canonical levels. What each one delivers, who needs to be in the room, and which artifact you walk out with.
Room setup, ground rules, time management, and the protocol to unblock groups stuck in discussion.
The standard semantics (events, commands, aggregates, policies, read models, hot spots) and how to adapt that language to your context.
The markers that separate business phases and give rise to DDD contexts. The team leaves with a navigable context map.
From the label on the sticky to the team's glossary. How to keep the language alive between product and engineering.
The bridge between the board and the roadmap. How to turn commands and policies into prioritizable items in the squad's flow.
Each level produces a concrete artifact — you leave day 2 with modeling, contexts, and language ready to use.
EventStorming with every stakeholder. We walk the business timeline from start to finish, expose the gaps, and leave with the first version of the map.
We go deep into the critical sub-processes: commands, policies, read models, and actors. The discussions surface rules that were hidden until now.
Fine-grained modeling of aggregates, invariants, and contracts between contexts. You leave with a context map, a consolidated ubiquitous language, and the bridge to the squad's backlog.
Three facilitators who apply EventStorming + DDD on real projects.
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