Businesses Will Turn To Low-Code For Agility
Mendix announced its list of customer experience trends that will drive business success in 2022. “Thriving companies are using low-code to accelerate their digital transformations and win customers,” said Tim Srock, CEO of Mendix, a Siemens business enterprise application development company. “To achieve that, they’re doing more than just building applications with low-code. They’re designing […]
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Mendix announced its list of customer experience trends that will drive business success in 2022.
“Thriving companies are using low-code to accelerate their digital transformations and win customers,” said Tim Srock, CEO of Mendix, a Siemens business enterprise application development company. “To achieve that, they’re doing more than just building applications with low-code. They’re designing exciting new customer experiences and optimising business processes through automation. They’re also unleashing the power of data and APIs to fuel innovation.”
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Customer Experience Is Now Experience Management
Customer experience isn’t a one-and-done game anymore. Businesses must deliver multi-experiences across channels to intelligently maintain their users’ preferences and contexts. Organisations need to understand that those preferences and contexts change and create a means of development to constantly adapt to best meet their users’ needs.
“The more touchpoints and devices you support, the more development kits you need to take advantage of model development platforms, augmented reality tools and IoT sensors,” said Nick Ford, Mendix CMO. “The model-based development and out-of-the-box integrations that low-code help developers deliver applications faster and provide better customer experiences.”
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Hyper-Personalisation Becomes The Norm
Today’s customers expect applications to adapt to their preferences and contexts. However, the complexity of providing that in real-time or near real-time is challenging because the application must understand the context, such as the person’s job role, the device in use, custom functionality, the user’s credentials and the user’s surroundings. Analysing all that data and responding appropriately and in a timely fashion requires AI.
Adapting quickly and appropriately to changing circumstances also requires constant feedback and iteration. The more iterations a company produces, the more feedback it will receive. That feedback data serves as valuable training data for machine learning models that will enable automated hyper-personalisation at scale.
“Hyper-personalisation will become a competitive differentiator in 2022,” Srock said. “As the world becomes increasingly digital, customers will expect experiences that are tailored and can adapt to their needs and desires in the moment. To do that, applications need to take advantage of AI versus executing simple rules.”
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Augmented and Virtual Reality Will Gain Traction In New Industries
Many industries are taking advantage of augmented and virtual reality in innovative ways. More manufacturing companies will prototype new products with 3D models and use AR and VR to perform quality assurance checks. Similarly, organisations will create immersive learning experiences, or leverage AR for a safe training alternative to hazardous environments.
“Organisations are no longer constrained by what exists in the physical world. Instead, they can choose between the analog and digital worlds — or marry the two,” Ford said. “In 2022, we’re going to see more business leaders reimagining how their companies operate, such as retailers offering AR experiences where customers can place 3D renderings of furniture in their homes to see how it fits.
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Out-of-the box APIs Improve Customer Experiences
App connectivity requires fast and reliable systems integration. To ensure experiences transition seamlessly as users go back and forth in the customer journey, organisations must create well-integrated backends that promote efficient data sharing.
“To create cohesive experiences across modalities and contexts, businesses will increase their use of out-of-the-box APIs that can easily connect disparate systems and data sources,” Srock said. “Developers will appreciate the speed with which they can connect core systems of record together and deliver what customers actually want, such as recognising the customer at every point in their journey and providing contextually relevant experiences.”
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Low-code will automate tasks within workflows
Process optimisation is driving competitive advantages. Yet, many organisations still struggle with paper-driven processes and email chain approval workflows that slow results and drive employees and customers alike crazy. Worse, data is trapped in application silos which further degrades customer and employee experiences. In 2022, more organisations will seek model-driven and user-centric development tools that make it easier to build apps and automate business processes.
“Every process impacts the customer experience. Global supply chain disruptions are just one example,” Ford said. “Empty shelves and late delivery are a symptom of inefficient backend processes when organisations should be able to adapt to a changing market in real time, at scale.”
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Prepare To Deliver Native And Progressive Web Apps
Mobile apps are a staple of the digital economy. Without the right architecture, it’s virtually impossible to cater to different contexts, devices, and personas. The choice between a native app or progressive web app (PWA) depends on the nature of the application. In 2022, companies must be able to build both native apps and PWAs so they can deliver the best customer experience for every mobile scenario.
Ford added, “The ubiquity of mobile isn’t the only reason you need to support both architectures. Mobile devices are evolving from data-receiving devices to data-providing devices, especially when you consider the professional-quality cameras included in smartphones and alternative reality-enabled applications.”
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User Experience Extends Past Mobile to IoT
Wearables, sensors, connected and intelligent environments. Whether on a manufacturing shop floor, in a warehouse, or out on a construction site, multi-experience is changing the way employees work. Businesses need to prepare for the glut of data wearables, for instance, will generate. They also need to consider the many ways wearable-acquired information can work in tandem with physical environments, such as sensors detecting access credentials which have been stored on a lanyard or smart watch, or being guided through a building by smart glasses.
“Marrying the physical and virtual worlds is one way to create new customer experiences. There’s also the notion of digital twins, which are capable of intelligent and even autonomous operations,” Srock said. “Creating a seamless experience between the analogue and digital worlds requires the delivery of the right data at the right time so the proper insights can be gleaned and the right actions taken.”
As the new year unfolds, Ford added, “Enterprises must be prepared to elevate the digital customer experience. This can be done rapidly with low-code enabled solutions. The pandemic has unleashed a tsunami of digital innovations for end-users — inside the enterprise and external customers beyond — who expect a frictionless, personalised experience. Digital networks that can rapidly and strategically respond to these trends will be competitively positioned to see tangible impacts and earn customer loyalty, bottom-line profits, and precision data to guide business outcomes.”
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