Skip to content

What we’re about

Welcome to the Datadog User Group! We hope you've landed on this page because you're interested in Datadog, whether you're an experienced user or just getting started in the space.

This group will serve as a ‘unified platform’ for everything Datadog in Amsterdam; a place to learn, get inspired, and share any experiences & best practices around Observability and Security for modern applications.

Join our user group! And invite your friends, co-workers and anybody else you think might be interested. The more of a community we can build, the more value for everyone!

-----
Learn more about Datadog

Upcoming events

1

See all
  • Site Reliability Engineering NL x Datadog User Group Meetup

    Site Reliability Engineering NL x Datadog User Group Meetup

    Datadog Netherlands, Herengracht 601, Amsterdam, NH, NL

    !! TO RSVP, click this link to the Site Reliability Engineering NL Meetup Community.

    Site Reliability Engineering NL and Datadog User Group are joining forces! Come and join us for the second autumn meetup on Thursday October 30th!

    Agenda
    18:00 Walk-in, snacks and drinks (vegetarian options available)
    18:30 Opening by SRE NL Meetup Organizers
    ~ 18.40 Talk1, Busra
    ~ 19.10 Break
    ~ 19.20 Talk 2, Andrea
    ~ 19.50 Talk 3, Line
    20:20 Drinks, food and socializing
    21:00-21:15 End

    Talks:
    1. Your System Doesn’t Learn from Incidents — You Do by Busra Koken

    Incidents are, by nature, unpredictable and often stressful. And, they’re also moments when our systems, teams, and habits get tested. When we’re brave enough to look at them closely, they reveal powerful opportunities to build stronger, reliable systems and healthier organizations.

    In this talk, I’ll share real stories and practical ways to spot those hidden gaps in how we respond, communicate, and learn. You’ll leave with actionable ideas you can try in your organization to make incidents a little less painful, and your systems a little more resilient.

    2. SRE culture and why it's so hard to get buy-in in larger organisations by Andrea Clasquin

    Changing culture is hard! And probably the hardest part of any (big) transformation. With my background in neuroscience and behavioral science, I bring a unique perspective on why so many change initiatives stall between the first step of most used frameworks (awareness and urgency) and the next crucial step: true buy-in. In this talk, I’ll explore what neuroscience and behavioral science can teach us about that gap and how we can make a first step in changing the way we approach cultural change. I will explain why our brains resist change, and what actually helps people move from understanding to genuine commitment. We’ll look at what it really takes to build an SRE-aligned culture, and why that’s such a stretch for many organizations. Most importantly, I’ll share practical ideas you can use in your own narrative to help people not just hear the case for change, but want to be part of it!

    3. Why doing a postmortem should be one of your favorite activities as an engineer! by Line de langen

    Postmortems don’t usually make the list of fun parts of being an engineer. They’re often seen as paperwork with some follow-up tickets sprinkled in. But here’s the thing: they can actually be one of the most rewarding (and weirdly enjoyable) parts of the job.In this talk, I’ll make the case for seeing postmortems not as a formality, but as an opportunity. They’re a rare chance to pause, dig into how things really work (or didn’t), and turn a messy situation into useful insights. You get to learn, collaborate across teams, and make meaningful changes that actually improve how your systems — and your team — operate.If you’ve ever thought ugh, not another postmortem, this talk is for you. It might just help you see them as something more than a checklist — and one of the most valuable habits you can build as an engineer.

    Privacy notice(s):

    • When you sign up to this event you agree that photos and/or video can be made and published, with your face potentially visible.
    • For security purposes your name, organization and e-mail will be shared with on-site security.

    If you have any issue with this, please let us know and we’ll work something out

    • Photo of the user
    • Photo of the user
    2 attendees

Group links

Members

728
See all