Two Minutes With ServiceNow VP, Great Expectations Co-Founder

The latest sessions of the Two-Minute Toolkit podcast offer insights into a way to compensate for shortages in professional developers and the impact of broken apps on data quality.

Marcus Torres, vice president and general manager of App Engine with ServiceNow, talks about alleviating some of the pressure caused by the limited availability of engineers by using low-code resources. It’s a refrain heard from others where non-engineers work on platforms that allow them to serve as citizen developers, taking up some of the slack that can slow down production.

Many companies now rely on their digital presence and increasingly need to maintain the cycle of deployment and updates for their apps. This makes low code a potential path to better balance the burden on staff.

The rush to build apps raises questions about what happens if they break. This brings us to another Two-Minute Toolkit, featuring Ben Castleton, co-founder and head of partnerships at Great Expectations. He talks about fixing data quality in light of apps that can break, which can impact an organization’s operations. Bad data from busted apps can be less than desirable, especially if that data is central to business strategy and the apps are critical to connecting with customers.

What to Read Next:

Quick Learning: Low Code/No Code for the Business Side

Is No Code and Low Code the Answer to the Dev Talent Gap?

3 Ways Data Problems Can Stop Your Business

Data Quality: How to Demonstrate ROI for Projects

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