- Your organization decided to invest in digital solutions to support their transition to a digital and automated workplace. They are ready to begin the planning and delivery of these solutions.
- However, IT capacity is constrained due to the high and aggressive demand to meet business priorities and maintain mission critical applications. Technical experience and skills are difficult to find, and stakeholders are increasing their expectations to deliver technologies faster with high quality using less resources.
- Stakeholders are interested in low and no code solutions as ways to their software delivery challenges and explore new digital capabilities.
Our Advice
Critical Insight
- Current software delivery inefficiencies and lack of proper governance and standards impedes the ability to successfully scale and mature low and no code investments and see their full value.
- Many operating models and culture do not enable or encourage the collaboration needed to evaluate business opportunities and underlying operational systems.This can exacerbate existing shadow IT challenges and promote a negative perception of IT.
- Low and no code tools bring significant organizational, process, and technical changes that IT and the business may not be prepared or willing to accept and adopt, especially when these tools support business and worker managed applications and services.
Impact and Result
- Establish the right expectations. Profile your digital end users and their needs and challenges. Discuss current IT and business software delivery and digital product priorities to determine what to expect from low- and no-code.
- Build your low- and no-code governance and support. Clarify the roles, processes, and tools needed for low- and no-code delivery and management through IT and business collaboration.
- Evaluate the fit of low- and no-code and shortlist possible tools. Obtain a thorough view of the business and technical complexities of your use cases. Indicate where and how low- and no-code is expected to generate the most return.
Member Testimonials
After each Info-Tech experience, we ask our members to quantify the real-time savings, monetary impact, and project improvements our research helped them achieve. See our top member experiences for this blueprint and what our clients have to say.
8.3/10
Overall Impact
$13,054
Average $ Saved
6
Average Days Saved
Client
Experience
Impact
$ Saved
Days Saved
UniSuper
Guided Implementation
8/10
$23,649
10
Department of Energy and Public Works
Guided Implementation
10/10
N/A
N/A
The session was very relevant to our current situation and provided some great material for further consideration and consumption. Suneel has a gre... Read More
South West Water
Guided Implementation
7/10
$2,460
2
Workshop: Satisfy Digital End Users With Low- and No-Code
Workshops offer an easy way to accelerate your project. If you are unable to do the project yourself, and a Guided Implementation isn't enough, we offer low-cost delivery of our project workshops. We take you through every phase of your project and ensure that you have a roadmap in place to complete your project successfully.
Module 1: Select Your Tools
The Purpose
- Understand the personas of your low- and no-code users and their needs.
- List the challenges low- and no-code is designed to solve or the opportunities you hope to exploit.
- Identify the low- and no-code tools to address your needs.
Key Benefits Achieved
- Level set expectations on what low- and no-code can deliver.
- Identify areas where low- and no-code can be the most beneficial.
- Select the tools to best address your problem and opportunities.
Activities
Outputs
Profile your digital end users
- Digital end-user skills assessment
Set reasonable expectations
- Low- and no-code objectives and metrics
List your use cases
- Low- and no-code use case opportunities
Shortlist your tools
- Low- and no-code tooling shortlist
Module 2: Deliver Your Solution
The Purpose
- Optimize your product delivery process to accommodate low- and no-code.
- Review and improve your product delivery and management governance model.
- Discuss how to improve your low- and no-code capacities.
Key Benefits Achieved
- Encourage business-IT collaborative practices and improve IT’s reputation.
- Shift the right accountability and ownership to the business.
- Equip digital end users with the right skills and competencies.
Activities
Outputs
Adapt your delivery process
- Low- and no-code delivery process and guiding principles
Transform your governance
- Low- and no-code governance, including roles and responsibilities, product ownership and guardrails
Identify your low- and no-code capacities
- List of low- and no-code capacity improvements
Module 3: Plan Your Adoption
The Purpose
- Design a CoE and/or CoP to support low- and no-code capabilities.
- Build a roadmap to illustrate key low- and no-code initiatives.
Key Benefits Achieved
- Ensure coordinated, architected, and planned implementation and adoption of low- and no-code consistently across the organization.
- Reaffirm support for digital end users new to low- and no-code.
- Clearly communicate your approach to low- and no-code.
Activities
Outputs
Support digital end users and facilitate cross-functional sharing
- Low- and no-code supportive body design (e.g. center of excellence, community of practice)
Yield results with a roadmap
- Low- and no-code roadmap