No-Code Development Platforms Resources
Articles, Glossary Terms, Discussions, and Reports to expand your knowledge on No-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, feature definitions, discussions from users like you, and reports from industry data.
No-Code Development Platforms Articles
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
How No-Code Development Platforms Can Help Reduce IT Employee Turnover
With the turbulence of summer 2022, organizations must be ready to face a unique set of challenges that continue to impact the global market. While the initial shock of COVID-19 may have passed, issues related to the virus remain. The global supply chain is struggling to manage inventory and meet consumer expectations for delivery time and service. Inflation has hit record highs, and the US economy has shown signs of slowing down.
by Michael Pigott
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
No-Code Development Platforms Glossary Terms
No-Code Development Platforms Discussions
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Question on: Agentforce 360 Platform (formerly Salesforce Platform)
What are the essential Salesforce Platform features a beginner should learn to improve customer relationship management?What are the essential Salesforce Platform features a beginner should learn to improve customer relationship management?
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Need to learn CRM data model and OOB functionality of the Salesforce CRM . Also better to start Salesforce Flow learning .
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Learn how to create new accounts, and update existing leads and contacts.
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Use trailhead within Salesforce to learn some of the basics. I found self learning with Salesforce the best use of time. You can create your own trail on the topics that you want to complete and then it will recommend best next steps. It will depend how you want to improve customer relationship management, is it the process, understanding data driven decisions the list is totally endless, but I would break it down into chunks and answer the following questions:
- What do you want to improve
- What does good look like
It could be as simple as improving a case layout, so you want to look at objects and fields, or it could be about dashboards and reporting
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A beginner should start by learning the overview of Salesforce and its business processes. The first step is to understand the Sales Cloud and Service Cloud, as these are the core components of Salesforce. Once you grasp these, you will have a good understanding of the CRM (Customer Relationship Management) process.
Salesforce also provides a built-in learning platform called Trailhead. You can sign up for a free Trailhead account and explore the basic modules on CRM, Sales Cloud, and Service Cloud.
These modules will guide you through:
1. What Salesforce is and how it works
2. How to create objects, fields, and records
3. The fundamentals of managing sales and service processes
This forms the foundation for moving into more advanced Salesforce features and customizations.
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Below mentioned points might help you as a beginner into Salesforce CRM:
1) Creating objects and fields
2) User permissions
3) Flows
4) Page layouts and Record Pages.
These are good to go as of now, there are lot of things to explore in this.
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Question on: SuprSend
How long do you store messages in in-app inbox?Is it possible to customise the number of notifications a user can see in the feed?
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Default it is stored for 1 month, so users have a manageable feed. But it is very much customizable.
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Question on: Airtable
What is Airtable used for?What is Airtable used for?
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Airtable is a general-purpose database, automation, and internal app platform. As a general purpose tool it is very flexible for a wide variety of purposes. It's like a spreadsheet but much more powerful.
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Real estate transaction and recruiting tracking. Also social media and onboarding tasklists. Kind of an SOP all together.
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Excellent use for organizing applications for research grant
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As boring as the phrase "relational database" sounds... that's Airtable's super-power. It's essentially a crazy user-friendly version of Excel that allows you to quickly organize, group, sort, and visualize comparative data.
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AirTable is used to empower spreadsheets by allowing one to quickly see their flat and linear data in enhanced ways. Quickly one can ask AirTable to look at all the records, identify who created or modified a record or even a given field. It can quickly tell you the given day, date, week, month or year of a date and then sort or group that data so one can quickly see when things happened and look for trends to the data flows. AirTable creates windows into one's data to hide the data not needed to be seen and focus at a granular level the data needed to understand the bigger picture.
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Airtable is so versatile and customizable that you can make it work for anything you want. Inventory tracking, project management, rolodex/contact management, team collaborations. Anything and everything! It's much more than a spreadsheet on steroids; it's multiple apps and software all in one: spreadsheet, database, calendar, and a ton more, all speaking to each other. I've been using Airtable for 8 years and I have yet to discover all of it's amazing features.
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Airtable is a cloud-based platform that combines spreadsheet functionality with database capabilities, used for organizing, managing, and collaborating on data. It enables users to create custom databases for tasks like project management, inventory tracking, event planning, or CRM without coding expertise. With a user-friendly interface, it supports customizable tables, views (grid, calendar, kanban), and templates tailored to specific needs. Teams can attach files, add comments, and automate workflows to streamline processes. Airtable integrates with tools like Slack, Google Drive, and Zapier, enhancing productivity. Its flexibility suits businesses, freelancers, and personal projects, offering both free and paid plans. Data security includes encryption and user permissions for safe collaboration.
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No-Code Development Platforms Reports
Mid-Market Grid® Report for No-Code Development Platforms
Spring 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Grid® Report for No-Code Development Platforms
Spring 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Enterprise Grid® Report for No-Code Development Platforms
Spring 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Momentum Grid® Report for No-Code Development Platforms
Spring 2026
G2 Report: Momentum Grid® Report
Small-Business Grid® Report for No-Code Development Platforms
Spring 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Enterprise Grid® Report for No-Code Development Platforms
Winter 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Small-Business Grid® Report for No-Code Development Platforms
Winter 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Mid-Market Grid® Report for No-Code Development Platforms
Winter 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Grid® Report for No-Code Development Platforms
Winter 2026
G2 Report: Grid® Report
Momentum Grid® Report for No-Code Development Platforms
Winter 2026
G2 Report: Momentum Grid® Report




