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Choosing a low-code / no-code platform

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Elizabeth Jordan Senior Director| FTI Consulting London, Lnd, United Kingdom
There are a number of low-code / no-code platforms (Betty Blocks, WEM, AppSheet, etc.) available and the ecosystem is still expanding. How do you figure out which platform is right for your organization?
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Sergio Luis Conte Helping to create solutions for everyone| Worldwide based Organizations Buenos Aires, Argentina
This is an ancient idea that have been in place from long time ago. In fact, I worked on companies that sell this type of tools as presales responsible and I was involved in creating base code from some of those tools. So, people can use it? Yes. The results will be they expected? No. Mainly today where all related to architecture must been put in the first place again.
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Aaron Porter
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IT Director| Blade HQ Payson, UT, United States
Remove the solution from your question, and how would you answer it? What does your company do when choosing software for any given purpose? Do you look at:

- ease of implementation
- ease of use
- availability of training & how easy is it to learn
- costs associated with implementation and support
- type(s) of support available
- costs associated with licensing
- reliability of platform/provider
- platform roadmap
- does the provided functionality meet your business needs
- does the platform support your business roadmap
- does the platform support your security and compliance requirements
- does the vendor understand your company/industry

This is just a short list, but a big part of the answer to your question is best practices for software and vendor selection. Some of the above suggestions may matter more than others. You also need to consider your company culture - supporters and blockers, and what will be different about your company once the implementation is done. For example, if you just implement a LCNC solution without governance, are you just moving shadow IT from spreadsheets and databases to a new location? You don't want to establish heavy bureaucracy, but you might want some sort of structure that sits between IT and the Business to control what goes into Production.

Some sort of sandbox environment may be helpful, allowing people to create apps and see how they work without impacting production. But, is there additional cost associated with having a sandbox?

These are just a few thoughts; hopefully they help.
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1 reply by Jody Temple White
Dec 06, 2020 11:21 AM
Jody Temple White
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Totally agree and a valid point - "If you just implement a LCNC solution without governance, are you just moving shadow IT from spreadsheets and databases to a new location? You don't want to establish heavy bureaucracy, but you might want some sort of structure that sits between IT and the Business to control what goes into Production."
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NAVANEETHA KRISHNAN BALRAJ Manager Project Management Office| Saxon Infotech New Market, MD, United States
Almost every product offers a demo and a free trail version. Hopefully this should give the organization some valuable time to figure out if the tool or the product comes with the features required and if it is compatible with the organization's policy. Once the demo and free trial is done, try doing a Decision Analysis & Resolution to find which product makes the cut.
Hope this helps!
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Jody Temple White Citizen Developer, PMP, Operations Specialist| ASG Projects, LLC Portland, Or, United States
Dec 01, 2020 12:25 PM
Replying to Aaron Porter
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Remove the solution from your question, and how would you answer it? What does your company do when choosing software for any given purpose? Do you look at:

- ease of implementation
- ease of use
- availability of training & how easy is it to learn
- costs associated with implementation and support
- type(s) of support available
- costs associated with licensing
- reliability of platform/provider
- platform roadmap
- does the provided functionality meet your business needs
- does the platform support your business roadmap
- does the platform support your security and compliance requirements
- does the vendor understand your company/industry

This is just a short list, but a big part of the answer to your question is best practices for software and vendor selection. Some of the above suggestions may matter more than others. You also need to consider your company culture - supporters and blockers, and what will be different about your company once the implementation is done. For example, if you just implement a LCNC solution without governance, are you just moving shadow IT from spreadsheets and databases to a new location? You don't want to establish heavy bureaucracy, but you might want some sort of structure that sits between IT and the Business to control what goes into Production.

Some sort of sandbox environment may be helpful, allowing people to create apps and see how they work without impacting production. But, is there additional cost associated with having a sandbox?

These are just a few thoughts; hopefully they help.
Totally agree and a valid point - "If you just implement a LCNC solution without governance, are you just moving shadow IT from spreadsheets and databases to a new location? You don't want to establish heavy bureaucracy, but you might want some sort of structure that sits between IT and the Business to control what goes into Production."
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Tiago Romao Project Manager - PfMP | PgMP | PMP | ACP | PBA | CBAP | CSM | MSc.| Altice Portugal | Meo Sobreda, Setubal/Almada, Portugal
Depends on which tools the organization already uses, low-code/no-code is a trend that the major players Google, Microsoft, already play.

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