At Urbancode, we refer to this as the "Bob the Builder" anti-pattern. The good news is that Bob (you) wants to get out of the loop. When the build guy can't go on vacation or get sick without parts of the process grinding to a halt, there really is an unacceptable problem. If I'm a betting man, as you start the process of simplifying the process down to "trained monkey" levels, you'll wonder why you're spending your time doing this rote stuff when you're smart and could actually be adding value somewhere.
The symptoms of "Bob the Builder" syndrome in our book:
- All requests for builds, or builds of a certain type, go through an individual or small team.
- Response to these build requests is annoyingly slow for developers. If the build team is at lunch, they wait hours.
- Bob, or the team of Bobs, spend a significant percentage of their time doing rote tasks.
- The Bobs going home for the day, going to lunch, going on vacation, or getting sick impede the ability of the team to get things done.
We tell our AnthillPro customers to push all of this kind of stuff into their automation. Having two build types that use different machines, different build numbers, etc shouldn't be a problem.
The first step is to dumb down the process. Drive as much complexity out as possible so that you can get down to the "trained monkey" process. Once you have something approaching that, replacing the monkey with a computer is pretty easy.
I'd give more specific advice, but I don't think you've told us where the complexity comes from, other than chaos. Sometimes in this situation you need to attack chaotic and bad practices. Are you doing builds that are "This baseline in source code and those two files and these three files?" That would be tricky and probably need a CMer in the loop. Find a way to forbid it. Replacing that with "Create a branch, and make specific changes to that branch" makes constructing the build doable by that monkey.
You should be able to argue for those changes as high risk. Even though you are good, you will have bad days and want to take human error out of the equation as much as possible. At the same time, if you're shooting for faster response to the developers and self service (which presumably development and management want) some things will need to be made automateable / monkeyable.
Having better forms can be good in the interim, and using your tools well is always good but I would attack the the "trained monkey" problem pretty aggressively. Anything that can't be done by a trained monkey (or a computer) should be a candidate for leaving the process. Once you have it down to "trained monkey" status, get your build automation in place so neither you nor the developers need to be monkeys. That changes your role from "Bob the Builder" to "Bob the Build System Owner".