London

June 28–29, 2027

New York

September 15–16, 2026

Berlin

November 9–10, 2026

Software quality

Software quality

Building better software

LDX3 New York is live

How to bake quality into your teams’ coding process

Taking code quality beyond documentation and into the fabric of your team’s work.

Building a culture of quality in engineering teams

On our Software Quality playlist

Ways your teams can (realistically) prioritize code quality

Code matters – learn how to create a culture of quality in your organisation

Using clinical science to effectively tackle code review anxiety talk by Carol Lee in LeadDev New York 2024 Conference

Using clinical science to effectively tackle code review anxiety

Uncover the science behind code review anxiety, its cognitive triggers, and actionable strategies to reduce anxiety, fostering a healthier code review culture for all developers.

In partnership with Swimm

A guide to creating a great code documentation culture

If your teams are struggling with code documentation, watch this on-demand webinar, where our panel of engineering leaders will discuss best practices and strategies to get started. Code documentation is often viewed as a necessary evil by development teams. There’s no doubt that mastering the art of creating…

In partnership with Sauce Labs

Building a better testing culture

How can engineering leaders create a healthy testing culture with clear strategies in place?

Joel Chippindale

Take back control of code quality

In this talk, Joel Chippindale shares stories from his experiences in leading engineering teams that illustrate the dynamics between team members and with stakeholders that lead teams to lose control of code quality.

The festival for modern engineering leadership

New York • September 15 & 16, 2026

More about Software Quality

Top Software Quality Videos

  • The dark side of lessons learned

    The dark side of lessons learned

    Dianing Yudono explains how you can boost the efficiency and effectiveness of your software development processes by unlocking the power of lessons learned and making them accessible to everyone. Let’s elevate our collective wisdom and drive success together!

  • The awful agony of the app store: When software delivery goes wrong

    The awful agony of the app store: When software delivery goes wrong

    Clare Sudbery shares a dramatic tale of ups and downs, tears and triumph, and the very sharp end of the sunk cost fallacy. Via the rollercoaster ride of a failed iOS app, Clare uses the experience to highlight several key components that contribute to successful software development… and offer understanding to those facing obstacles beyond their control.

  • How we support making architectural decisions

    How we support making architectural decisions

    Olena Sovyn takes a deep dive from the principles based on which this group operates to the specific how-to that made its work beneficial for the company and shares what we’ve learned from this whole experience so far.

  • Code is poetry

    Code is poetry

    Niranjan Uma Shankar talks about how to write good readable code, ticket descriptions, bug patches, et al, in PHP and Javascript.

  • Red 2.0: Transforming a Game Company

    Red 2.0: Transforming a game company

    Colin Walder takes a look at how the Tech Team at CD Projekt applied the Red 2.0 Manifesto as part of a company-wide transformation after the release of Cyberpunk 2077.

  • In partnership with Sauce Labs

    Building a better testing culture

    How can engineering leaders create a healthy testing culture with clear strategies in place?

  • Erica Greene

    What is tech policy and how you can get involved

    Erica Greene discusses some of the big ongoing tech policy debates and walks through ways you can get involved in the policy world.

  • Eleanor Saitta

    Security from scratch

    Eleanor Saitta tells you as much as possible in 30 minutes about what you do need to worry about, when you need to worry about it, how you can fix it, and what you don’t need to worry about — yet.