Low-Code Development Platforms Resources
Articles, Discussions, and Reports to expand your knowledge on Low-Code Development Platforms
Resource pages are designed to give you a cross-section of information we have on specific categories. You'll find articles from our experts, discussions from users like you, and reports from industry data.
Low-Code Development Platforms Articles
32 Low-code Development Statistics to Know Before Adopting
Many people want to design their applications but they can’t due to a lack of coding skills.
by Rajendra Roul
I Tested 10 No-code Development Platforms: My Review as a Proud No-coder
Over the past 10+ years, I have managed websites across industries such as car insurance, pet insurance, digital media, e-commerce, and more, all while working with limited developer resources. Hence, utilizing no-code and low-code development platforms has been key to my success.
by Hayata Nakamura
Automation and Collaboration in Focus at Salesforce’s TrailblazerDX 2022
Salesforce’s TrailblazerDX (TDX) 2022, a Salesforce developer conference at the end of April, featured a plethora of forward-looking statements, demos, workshops, and dancing mascots. Much was said and shown, but automation and collaboration were key themes at both TDX and the preceding analyst summit. So how does Salesforce's messaging line up with what software buyers are asking for?
by Adam Crivello
Trends 2021 Followup: No-Code And Low-Code Market Signals
It’s been over six months since G2 published its 2021 digital trends series. That means more than half a year ago, my fellow analysts and I put our most overconfident hats on and called some shots for our respective B2B software markets.
by Adam Crivello
Site Reliability Engineers and the Software That Supports Them
Digital transformation efforts have become more like digital transformation mandates in the tech world ever since the COVID-19 pandemic made working from home the new normal. This has meant a rapid change in the B2B software landscape (although when has that not been the case?) as vendors rise to meet buyer demand for collaborative, hybrid technologies.
by Adam Crivello
Why You Should Learn to Code (Even If You’re Not a Developer)
Sometimes a certain skill or trend comes along that really gets everyone talking.
by Mara Calvello
Low-Code Development Platforms Discussions
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Question on: OutSystems
what is the best way to clone or migrate production data to lower environments.it is so painful to solve a problem without the right data set and having not the same data between environements just complicates things so much.
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Please have a look @ DMM from Infosistema. https://www.infosistema.com/dmm-data-migration-manager/
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Try Cool Data Mover in the Forge
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Question on: OutSystems
I am interested in the Mobile application deployment, what do I need to do to get thereStart looking for different development ways and frameworks. That can introduce you to native vs hybrid discussion...
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Question on: Bubble
How is itRecently changed for the worst. Still has bad management and still has an amazing community!
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The real answer to this question is that it works. In some areas it works really well and beyond expectation. Yet, in other areas, it fails to provide a robust infrastructure upon which you can build a commercial solution.
The question really, is what is Bubble meant to be? A place to hack around and prove a concept only, or something that a business can build a commercially viable and reliable solution. I've been using the platform for 4 years and built 2 commercial applications on it and I still struggle to answer to this question.
While it provides a framework that on the surface seems restrictive, it is actually quite powerful and provides non-hardcore-developers with the ability to create some amazing functionality. Yet, it has numerous areas that have you throwing up your hands in despair.
An example is the way it handles plug-ins which you are going to need to use in order to do anything significant (like play videos, display a data-driven chart, take a payment, create a data-driven menu - yikes, play a sound, etc.). While some plug-ins are written in-house, about 95% of them are built by third-parties with little to no validation from Bubble and then sold to paying users. While some of the plug-ins are great, the majority of the ones I've tried and purchased are simply unusable and often not working as advertised. This makes the stability and security of the environment suspect. Recently, I had a plug in that simply wasn't working as advertised. I spent two days chasing that third party for support, only to eventually discover my own hack to make it work.
Only a week later, today, I needed help because a significant piece of the systems functionality stopped working. While not a severity 1 for me, it is critical to my ability to resolve a customer issue and is clearly a piece of functionality that we believe is broken across the entire platform (as far as we can tell across multiple accounts). The response we received was that the Bubble office is closed today and only emergency requests would be serviced. Very disappointing response for anyone actually working on Columbus Day and trying to address their own customer issues. While I agree our case is not an "emergency", it is significantly hampering our ability to fix an important issue for our paying customer. Is that a position you want to be in?
I think the pricing is fair. It starts cheap and gets expensive quickly, but I think that is a fair model. I think the performance and what you can achieve with it are impressive.
We've had no data lost, we've had no data corruption, but yet, getting data out of the platform is almost impossible. I've had simple exports simply not work, I've had simple mass updates (only 800-1,000 records) just hang or stop and all sorts of simple things turn into work that just took way too long to achieve. We've read instances of people building the app in Bubble and integrating the app directly to a SQL database via an API.
I'd recommend thoroughly understanding the Bubble paradigm before building a robust application. It forces you to rethink some general design principles, which at the end of the day, actually work pretty well within the tool.
After all that, do I recommend it? Until I see the company demonstrate a commitment to providing the mission critical framework upon which companies build their businesses, I can't say that I do. I think it is great to beta test an idea or even get a commercially viable prototype up and running. I just wouldn't bet on it as the solid foundation for a growing enterprise and I am very nervous that I have :-)
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Low-Code Development Platforms Reports
Mid-Market Grid® Report for Low-Code Development Platforms
Spring 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Grid® Report for Low-Code Development Platforms
Spring 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Enterprise Grid® Report for Low-Code Development Platforms
Spring 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Momentum Grid® Report for Low-Code Development Platforms
Spring 2026
G2 Report: Momentum Grid® Report
Small-Business Grid® Report for Low-Code Development Platforms
Spring 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Enterprise Grid® Report for Low-Code Development Platforms
Winter 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Small-Business Grid® Report for Low-Code Development Platforms
Winter 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Mid-Market Grid® Report for Low-Code Development Platforms
Winter 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Grid® Report for Low-Code Development Platforms
Winter 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Momentum Grid® Report for Low-Code Development Platforms
Winter 2026
G2 Report: Momentum Grid® Report






