Empowering Marketers: How Citizen Development Transforms Marketing Strategies
| In today's fast-paced digital landscape, businesses need agility and speed to stay competitive, especially in marketing. Traditional development processes, which often involve complex coding and heavy reliance on IT departments, can slow down innovation and responsiveness. To overcome these challenges, a growing number of organizations are embracing citizen development — a model where non-technical employees use low-code or no-code platforms to build applications, automate workflows, and solve business problems. This approach is particularly effective in marketing, where creativity, responsiveness, and the ability to act on data insights quickly are critical. By integrating citizen development into your marketing strategy, you can empower your marketing teams to create custom solutions without waiting for IT intervention. This not only accelerates the execution of marketing initiatives but also fosters a culture of innovation. In this blog, we'll explore how to integrate citizen development into your marketing strategy, the benefits it offers, and practical steps to ensure its success. What is Citizen Development?Citizen development is a practice that allows non-technical employees, also known as "citizen developers," to create applications or automate processes using low-code or no-code platforms. These platforms provide user-friendly interfaces, often with drag-and-drop features, pre-built templates, and reusable components, allowing employees to build solutions without extensive programming knowledge. In marketing, this means that professionals who understand the intricacies of customer engagement, campaign management, and content creation can develop their own tools and workflows. Whether it's automating email sequences, creating dashboards for campaign analytics, or developing customer segmentation tools, citizen development enables marketers to take control of their processes and boost efficiency. Why Integrate Citizen Development into Your Marketing Strategy?Integrating citizen development into your marketing strategy offers several key benefits:
Steps to Integrate Citizen Development into Your Marketing StrategyTo successfully integrate citizen development into your marketing strategy, it's important to follow a structured approach. Here’s a step-by-step guide: 1. Identify Areas for Citizen DevelopmentStart by identifying marketing processes and tasks that could benefit from citizen development. These are typically areas where automation, custom tools, or data integration could enhance efficiency. Common use cases for citizen development in marketing include:
Once you've identified the key areas, prioritize them based on impact and feasibility. 2. Choose the Right Low-Code/No-Code PlatformsSelecting the right platforms is crucial for enabling citizen development. Popular low-code/no-code platforms like Zapier, AppSheet, OutSystems, and Power Apps offer powerful features that allow non-technical users to build applications and automate workflows. For marketing-specific needs, tools like HubSpot, Salesforce Lightning, and Airtable are also excellent choices. When evaluating platforms, consider the following factors:
3. Provide Training and SupportEven though low-code and no-code platforms are designed for non-technical users, providing proper training is essential for successful implementation. Training programs should cover:
In addition to training, offer ongoing support. Establish a help desk or create internal forums where marketers can ask questions, share best practices, and collaborate on projects. 4. Establish Governance and GuidelinesGovernance is critical to maintaining security, compliance, and quality across citizen development initiatives. While marketers have the freedom to create their own solutions, there should be guidelines in place to ensure consistency and alignment with organizational goals. Some governance practices include:
By setting clear guidelines, you can strike a balance between empowering marketers and maintaining control over the development process. 5. Foster Collaboration Between Marketing and ITAlthough the goal of citizen development is to reduce dependence on IT, it’s still important to foster collaboration between marketing and IT teams. IT can provide valuable support in areas such as platform setup, integration with enterprise systems, and ensuring that all citizen-developed applications comply with organizational security policies. To encourage collaboration, establish regular communication channels between marketing and IT. This can be through scheduled meetings, shared project management tools, or a cross-functional citizen development committee. 6. Measure and Optimize ResultsLike any marketing initiative, it's essential to measure the success of your citizen development efforts. Track metrics such as:
Use these metrics to optimize your citizen development strategy over time. Encourage feedback from marketing teams to understand what’s working well and where improvements can be made. Examples of Citizen Development in MarketingHere are a few real-world examples of how citizen development can be applied in B2B marketing:
ConclusionCitizen development is a game-changer for marketing teams. By integrating it into your marketing strategy, you can empower non-technical marketers to take control of their workflows, create custom solutions, and innovate more quickly. The benefits of increased agility, cost savings, and enhanced collaboration make citizen development a valuable tool in modern marketing. To succeed, it's essential to provide the right tools, training, and governance while fostering collaboration between marketing and IT. As you embrace citizen development, you'll find your marketing teams becoming more productive, creative, and responsive to the ever-changing demands of the market. Embrace the future of marketing by integrating citizen development into your strategy — and watch your marketing operations soar. |
Low-Code or No-Code....What's the difference?
| Have you been wondering what the difference is between Low-Code and No-Code is? Read our quick primer to learn about these key terms in citizen development. In a recent interview between Sunil Prashara, President and CEO of PMI, and Praveen Seshadri, founder of AppSheet, Praveen drew a comparison between building software and driving a car. In the early days, driving a car was a very involved affair. Features we take for granted today simply didn’t exist; the automatic starter was not standard equipment in cars for many years. You had to physically crank the engine. You didn’t have a gear box or stick shift. There was no speedometer, water pressure or fuel gauge. Driving a car was clumsy and hard. In a similar way, early software engineering was tedious, painstaking and required a great deal of knowledge. The software pioneers had to be competent in many domains – being able to write instructions the computer could understand, how to write programmes to memory, how and where to store the data. All of this required the flicking of switches and the loading of punch cards or magnetic film in precise orders, making even small mistakes very costly. Most people will agree that driving a modern car today no longer requires experience akin to having a doctorate in mechanical engineering. Similarly, software engineering has evolved such that it is no longer the exclusive domain of the dedicated IT professional. In both these cases, over time, the relentless drive to make things easier, faster and more user friendly has meant that today pretty much anyone can drive a car, or build an application. Chances are you are already familiar with the terms low-code and no-code application development platforms. Essentially, they are what they say on the tin; low-code platforms started to make an appearance around three decades ago. Many of them born out of software houses’ desire to minimise repetitive, tedious very error prone tasks that are common when coding. No-code platforms are a natural evolution of low-code, with the ambition being total obfuscation of the complexities of code.
Low-Code Low-code platforms can be defined as tools that let you build software applications with a minimal amount of coding. Software developers can leverage pre-fabricated “blocks of code” to rapidly create applications. Rather than focusing their efforts on hand-coding the application end-to-end, they these pre-fab code blocks to construct the application, and then use code for fine-tuning where and when desired. In the strictest sense, low-code platforms require some level of coding knowledge, and this makes sense given that the target market, by and large, has been the existing IT department and software houses – these tools were designed to speed up what they were already doing, rather than trying to make software development more accessible to non-IT folk. That said, some low-code platforms do also appeal to the non-coder and indeed are being used by them to great effect, for example in building MVPs which could then be handed over to the IT team to finish off and publish. Low-code is markedly faster than hand-coding, and as a result projects are cheaper. Many prominent platform vendors feature use cases demonstrating 10x faster project delivery times compared to hand-coding approaches. This is one reason that Gartner estimates that the low-code market will be responsible for more than 65% of applications by 2024. No-Code While conceptually similar, no-code platforms go a step further and attempt to completely eliminate the need to write even a line a of code when creating an application. Boasting clean, intuitive graphical interfaces with point-and-click and drag-and-drop mechanics, no-code platforms are designed to be approachable to those outside the IT department. This is one of the fundamental drivers behind the growing global interest in the Citizen Development movement. Users of no-code platforms have demonstrated orders-of-magnitude faster delivery times when compared to hand-coding and even low-code. Application development projects that would ordinarily take months to simply mobilise, can now be delivered in a few days by a trained user of a no-code platform. It is important to note that no-code platforms are not inherently better than low-code platforms. For the increase in speed, there is a reduction in control. Indeed, many organizations prefer their existing low-code platforms, given they are likely less locked-down and offer a greater level of flexibility and control. There are numerous instances of core systems and highly complex applications that have been built using low-code platforms, but notably fewer examples on no-code platforms. It is also worth stating that low-code and no-code are sometimes used interchangeably and some platforms can justifiably be viewed as having both low-code and no-code characteristics (and catering to both the IT department and the non-IT business user at the same time). There are numerous no-code vendors out there that allow users to code, for example.
Conclusion Low-code and no-code platforms have demonstrated incredible return on investment for those organizations that have taken the plunge.
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