All terms
Automation

What is No-Code

Building applications without programming

No-Code — a development approach that allows creating applications without writing code using visual builders.

Features

  • Visual drag-and-drop interface
  • Ready-made templates and components
  • No programming skills required
  • Fast prototype and MVP launch

Popular Platforms

  • Bubble
  • Webflow
  • Glide
  • Adalo
  • Tilda

Applications

  • Landing pages and websites
  • Mobile applications
  • Internal tools
  • Process automation

Benefits

Omnichannel Experience. Unified customer experience across all channels: website, app, messengers. Automatic request routing to the right channel. Interaction history in one place. Customer satisfaction grows by 40 points.

How to Start

Step 1: Testing Strategy. Create a comprehensive test suite before development starts. Define acceptance criteria for every feature. Set up automated regression testing. Conduct load testing for peak scenarios.

ROI & Efficiency

Working Capital. Working capital efficiency grows 35%. Interest expenses drop 40%. Asset turnover ratio increases 30%. Return on assets grows 20 percentage points through operational optimization.

Common Mistakes

No Documentation. Knowledge transfer is impossible without documentation. New employees can't maintain undocumented systems. Document architecture, business rules, exception cases. This is an investment, not overhead.

Who Needs It

Media & Entertainment. Media companies with content personalization needs. Streaming services with recommendation algorithms. Publishers automating production workflows. Gaming companies leveraging player analytics.

Practical Example

Case: Accounting. A company with 5,000 monthly documents automated recognition and processing. OCR + AI extracts data from invoices in seconds. Month-end closing dropped from 10 to 2 days. Transaction errors reduced 95%.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q:Where should I start with automation?
Begin with an audit: identify processes consuming the most time. Choose 1-2 processes with repetitive steps and clear rules. Run a pilot in 2-4 weeks. Measure results and scale successful solutions to other processes.
Q:Which processes should be automated first?
Ideal candidates are repetitive tasks with clear rules: request processing, report generation, email campaigns, data reconciliation. Criteria: high frequency (daily), lots of manual work, clear business logic. Avoid starting with processes requiring frequent exceptions.
Q:How to ensure security of automated processes?
Implement security by design: access control, data encryption, audit trail from day one. Conduct regular security assessments. Set up anomaly monitoring. Ensure GDPR/regulatory compliance. Apply the principle of least privilege for all automated processes.