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Low-code and no-code means faster software development and deployment, as well as turning developers into facilitators.
Breaking out different environments based on use cases can also help create risk boundary policies based on what and how the resultant low-code/no-code apps are actually doing once they’re live.
And though low-code, no-code tools are rapidly increasing in their sophistication, it’s still the case that roughly 54% of developers don’t use LCNC tools at all.
The low-code/no-code ecosystem is vast and includes some of the biggest names in enterprise technology to a full range of smaller companies and specific use cases.
Using Low-Code/No-Code In The Contact Center Beyond standard use cases, CRM, customer experience and contact center applications can use low-code and no-code to achieve more velocity with newer tools.
Developers are the Jedis of innovation. Low-code and no-code won't change that, but it will bring more people into the field of software development and help companies be more agile.
Which low-code, no-code, or process automation platform is right for your organization? It depends on how well the platform meets your business objectives.
While good for fast experiments and automating routine tasks, low code/no code tools can lack scalability and security. Here are some top use cases, and those where they might miss the mark.
If you have to have 100% coverage of every use case, low-code is not the way you want to go either. The more flexibility you have, the more low-code/no-code makes sense.
Low code and no code can be part of a successful cloud solution, but you need the proper protection mechanisms to guard against inadvertent mistakes.
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