Platform Comparison

Everything You Need To Know About

Low-Code Platforms

“By 2025, 70% of new applications developed by organizations will use low-code or no-code technologies”

Gartner

Best fit = best results

Low-code and no-code platforms help simplify and speed up development. But with Gartner tracking more than 400 different platforms in their Magic Quadrant, even deciding on the right platform is complex.

There’s an idea that low-code can only handle automation and simple tasks. But some low-code platforms can handle your most complex use cases, improve customer experiences, create cost efficiencies, and mitigate risks. Low-code helps you speed up while maintaining control. A one-size-fits-all kind of thinking costs you opportunities to do more and differentiate.

Are all low-code and no-code platforms built the same? Of course not. So, how do you choose not just your top use cases but also the right use cases for the right platform?

Key Considerations

Before you make any decisions, you'll want to be clear on your capabilities and priorities on some key topics:

  • Use Cases

    What are they? How many processes? How business-critical? Are your users internal, external, or both? Are you most interested in one-off solutions or preparing for scale?

  • Process

    Are you satisfied with your current development approach and platforms, or are they holding you back?

  • Data

    How important is integrating multiple data sources and external APIs?

  • Speed

    How quickly do you want to get started?

  • Deployment

    What’s your cloud strategy? What flexibility do you need?

  • UI / UX

    How important is this to you and your users? How about native mobile?

  • Collaboration

    Do you want business technologists to participate in development? Do you want business stakeholders to collaborate actively with IT teams?

  • Efficiency

    Do you want a platform that can do everything? Or are you comfortable using high code and multiple IDEs?

No-code

No-code platforms are precisely what they sound like. Almost all development happens in a visual, drag-and-drop way. Vendors include, among others, Unqork, Creatio, and Kintone.

  • Pros
  • Easy to use
    Built for business users, making it accessible and intuitive
  • Premade connectors
    Easily call an API to get data
  • Fast deployment
    Excellent for specific use cases like office event registration and feedback forms
  • Cons
  • Complicated use cases
    Generally lack ability to add and maintain custom components
  • Flexibility concerns
    Lack of cloud flexibility, less control over scalability and resources
  • Integration challenges
    Struggles to create connectors to systems and data sources using interfaces and protocols like REST, SOAP, JDBC, OData, etc.

BPM (business process management)

Gartner defines business process management (BPM) as helping organizations use “various methods to discover, model, analyze, measure, improve and optimize business processes.” BPM software covers both BPM and dynamic case management (CM). Platforms include, among others, Appian, Pega, and Newgen.  

  • Pros
  • Automate single workflow processes
    Improve efficiencies through streamlining
  • Manage complex processes
    Dynamic CM can manage processes across several systems such as decisioning, robotic process automation (RPA), and AI
  • Cons
  • Developer experience
    Problems with broader issues, such as UX and data models. Lack of experiences like Git, versioning, and automation
  • Collaboration & management
    Difficulty enabling collaboration, lifecycle management, and a steep learning curve
  • Cost & complexity
    Higher costs for building and maintenance

SaaS-attach

SaaS platforms provide a portfolio of related products, including low-code offerings that make it easier to create or extend applications within their ecosystems. These platforms often feature web-based IDEs for creating business logic, workflows, and applications with minimal coding effort. Examples of platforms include Microsoft PowerPlatform, Salesforce, ServiceNow, Oracle, Zoho, and Huawei.

  • Pros
  • Easy to use
    User-friendly and fits within the rest of its ecosystem
  • Streamlined integration
    Leverages existing data within the ecosystem, such as a Sharepoint form or Salesforce instance
  • Built-in connectors
    Offers connectors and APIs to help pull data from existing sources
  • Cons
  • Limited flexibility
    Lack of deployment flexibility and scalability, and inability to build outside the ecosystem
  • Collaboration & data-sharing
    Difficult to share data across projects and teams effortlessly
  • Full-code extensions
    May need to extend with full-code IDEs and professional developers, making development complex

General purpose

General purpose low-code platforms offer extensive capabilities, allowing you to seamlessly combine data sources, unite different systems, and build impactful solutions across the enterprise. These platforms, such as Mendix, are designed to handle complex use cases and drive digital transformation throughout the enterprise.

  • Pros
  • Comprehensive solutions
    Handle complex use cases, ideal for wide-reaching digital transformation initiatives
  • Seamless integration
    Connectors to a wide variety of tools and services (such as SAP, AWS, and OpenAI) speed up development and enable more robust solutions
  • Scalability
    Reusable components and connectors help organizations scale from a single solution to enterprise-wide
  • Cons
  • Learning curve
    Must invest time and resources into training and familiarization

LCAPs at a glance

Now that you've seen your options, think about your priorities and needs. Let's sum it up:

PROSCONSUSE CASES
NO-CODE Easy to use,
premade connectors, fast deploymentComplicated use cases, flexibilty concerns, integration challengesOffice event registration, feedback forms 
BPMAutomate single workflow processes, manage complex processesDeveloper experience, collaboration & management, cost & complexityProcess automation 
SAAS-ATTACHEasy to use. streamlined integration, built-in connectorsLimited flexibility, collaboration & data-sharing, full-code extensionsCustom forms and workflows within the ecosystem 
GENERAL PURPOSEComprehensive solutions, seamless integrations, scalability Learning curve Customer portals, mobile apps, process automation, conquering complexity throughout the enterprise 

Low-code, high results

Maybe the most crucial question, though, is, “Do you have ambitious digitalization goals?” If so, Mendix is the only low-code platform designed for challenges across the enterprise.

Mendix brings a proven platform, process, and practice designed to help you move from idea to outcome and scale in a truly transformative way. Native mobile, version control, built-in governance, focus on your existing CI/CD pipeline, strategic partnerships with leaders like AWS and Snowflake, cloud-native. Mendix is the only platform that offers everything.

With Mendix, the question isn’t “what if?,” it’s “what’s next?” Get your subscription to innovation with the low-code leader.

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