New blog post! Coding is dead. Long live the Code!
Updated: Oct 1, 2021
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In my last article, I described the risks of relying on Excel spreadsheets for critical business decisions and processes.
As almost everyone reading this article would have at some point experienced for themselves, these complex spreadsheets are accidents waiting to happen,
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Especially when they are handed from one owner to another. Most of the time, these tools are built by so-called citizen developers, who possess the competence to understand the required calculations and have taught themselves Excel, but lack the programming knowledge required to be able to code these tools in a more stable runtime environment.
Meanwhile, the demands of digital business are accelerating at such a rate that IT departments are swamped. The rise of the citizen developer is a natural response to a mounting problem. Manual touchpoints inside business processes are known as ‘small app gaps’. These points-of-failure are not large enough to warrant the attention of the IT team, but collectively important enough to bring down the productivity of a firm.
So what’s the answer?
Professional developers – the IT department – can take advantage of low-code to focus on developing complex, enterprise-grade solutions with greater speed and fewer resources. The advantage is that the user still has the option to customize the system, but without the risk that often comes with directly editing the raw code.
Speed of development and more importantly, agility in responding to changes in requirements
Ability to multiply the resource pool without having to hire more staff, by training citizen developers
Solutions are easier to maintain and can be deployed across the organization via a cloud-native architecture
Allow for the integration of cutting-edge technologies, including artificial intelligence, to enhance processes as well as making them more efficient.
This holds out the hope of ending the divide between IT departments and the business as a whole. A low code platform is something that both sides can contribute to, and hence creates a sense of collaboration, rather than a feeling of separate domains.
Steve Jobs famously pinpointed the rise of the personal computer as a key inflection point in human history. The opening up of software development could turn out to be an event of similar magnitude for the business world. Don’t miss out.
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