The Road to Low-Code | Lifecycle Management and Feature Cataloging

As I mentioned in the introduction one of the primary drivers towards low-code development is increased velocity and a lower bar of entry. Both of these are good things, however, as we saw earlier the lower bar of entry might not be enough. Additionally, the increased velocity (due to more contributors from a non-technical background) …

The Road to Low-Code | Will (and Should) They Come?

So, now you’ve built this low-code platform and overly optimistic expectation is that all your users who previously had requests are going to be tripping over each other to implement their features. Well, not so much… We’ve had a mixed response coming from our users around embracing the low-code mentality. In some cases it’s very …

The Road to Low-Code | Mitigating Foreseen & Unforeseen Low-Code Impacts

Before we started our journey to low code we knew that there were going to be areas that we had to mitigate in advance if we were going to be successful. The core of many of these was around the ability to capture the “low-code output” as actual code and storing it in our own …

The Road to Low-Code | Selection Criteria

If you are to search for “low-code benefits” you will quickly find that there are many opinions and experiences around the benefits of low-code development. The aforementioned Google search returns about 8.5 billion results. A couple examples are: Decreased costs Higher productivity Improved agility Enhanced Innovation (hmm… that’s an interesting concept) Lower barrier to entry …