Platform engineering has become the dominant organizational response to the operational and cog‐ nitive load of running distributed software systems at scale. Despite extensive practitioner literature on what platforms should do, comparatively little work addresses how to quantify the economic re‐ turn on platform investment. This paper proposes a framework for evaluating platform engineering investment in distributed engineering organizations, derived from leading the scaling of an enter‐ prise software engineering organization from approximately eight engineers to more than one hun‐ dred while maintaining engineering retention near ninety five percent and migrating from biweekly releases to continuous delivery. The framework decomposes platform return into three measurable components. avoided cognitive load, accelerated time to first deployment, and recovered senior engi‐ neering capacity. We propose specific instruments for each component and discuss the leadership decisions that determine whether platform investment compounds or stalls. The framework is in‐ tended for engineering leaders, finance partners, and technology executives evaluating sustained platform funding against alternative engineering investments.
Prashanth Reddy Pasham (Mon,) studied this question.