- The Mendix report finds that 99% of manufacturing organizations use a low code
- The leaders of the C Suite C grow for the advantages of low code efficiency
- AI could further improve things, but at the cost of the update
New research has revealed how companies could benefit from a low -code and artificial intelligence in the midst of a continuously difficult economy.
The Mendix report reveals the already extensive nature of the low code, with 99% of manufacturing organizations that use it for development and 84% of IT leaders believing that the low code combined with AI could accelerate innovation.
However, it is not only how many organizations use a weak code that surprises, it is also how beneficial it has been for them, explains Mendix.
Low code and AI could accelerate commercial innovation
Some of the advantages highlighted include: an improvement in productivity for technical teams, a rationalized development process, an improvement in market time, faster innovation and large -scale innovation.
The low code is clearly admired for its productivity development capacities, with 50% of COOs and 51% of the CEOs involved strongly in the decision -making process surrounding its adoption; This is particularly noticeable in the manufacturing industry.
Technology is now used for digital transformation strategies (52%), improves inherited processes (48%) and reduces operational costs (43%).
Combined with artificial intelligence, the low code seems to unlock even more time. Four in five respondents (81%) use a low -code and AI coding, but the usual concerns remain in place in the adoption of AI among companies.
More than two -thirds (69%) of technical leaders are concerned about the governance of AI, and there is also a generalized feeling according to which additional training and upgrade efforts are necessary to make the most of the artificial intelligence.
“Used wisely, the low code consists in rethinking whole commercial processes from zero,” noted the CEO of Mendix Raymond Kok.
“Low-Code also opens up new paths so that the merger teams can think more about the use of technology to transform their organization for the future, as long as they favor upgrading users to maximize the potential of low code for their unique use cases.