• About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • Events
  • Newsletter
  • Podcasts
  • Digital Magazine
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • Events
  • Newsletter
  • Podcasts
  • Digital Magazine
NZBusiness Magazine

Type and hit Enter to search

Linkedin Facebook Instagram Youtube
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability
NZBusiness Magazine
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability
Technology

Delivering agility through digitalisation

Low-code platforms helps Kiwi organisations easily facilitate the digitalisation and automation of processes.  They take enterprise software to new levels of connectivity, agility and speed. Digitalisation is a word that […]

NZBusiness Editorial Team
NZBusiness Editorial Team
November 17, 2022 3 Mins Read
2.2K

Low-code platforms helps Kiwi organisations easily facilitate the digitalisation and automation of processes.  They take enterprise software to new levels of connectivity, agility and speed.

Digitalisation is a word that gets mentioned a lot in business circles whenever the subject of business growth and efficiency is raised.

Nobody knows this more than Matt Calkins, CEO and co-founder of Washington DC-based Appian, a unified platform that helps businesses worldwide discover, design, and automate their most important data processes. He describes digitalisation as the use of technology to improve your customer service comms and unify your business, and says organisations have struggled to implement digital business models in the past because they weren’t serious about it.

“Digital was always something you talked about, but didn’t do.

“The pandemic has now changed attitudes on data and digitalisation around the world,” he says. “It reinforced just how important agility is and how our businesses depend on that agility.”

Matt says enterprise software has traditionally been laid down in a problem/response pattern, which has had the effect of creating silos of data and deeper decentralisation.

“Digital has to overcome the dispersion of data-logic and users in order to provide real benefits to customers’ success and real organisation-wide agility.”

He explains the typical scenario of a customer connecting by phone or app. In that moment your business needs to be able to quickly and seamlessly access all relevant information on that customer from multiple databases.

“Unfortunately, customer data, from CRM to technical support, has typically been scattered across different systems. Data centralisation is a myth,” says Matt.

Appian provides the process automation platform that facilitates the entire lifecycle of a new process, he explains, from figuring out what the data process should do, to designing in new code in a unique flowchart style, to automated execution of the process.

Traditionally software companies have made the mistake of building apps or processes and then failing to modify or change it.  “It becomes immutable,” explains Matt, “locking organisations into out-of-date behaviour.”

Your software must be flexible, personal and accessible; not robotic,” he says. “And easy to change to allow for the latest strategies and regulations.”

“Appian takes away the laborious and divided nature of enterprise software and makes it something connected, agile and fast.” – Appian CEO and founder Matt Calkins.”

Overcoming the barriers

Some organisations and businesses are progressing faster on the digitalisation of processes than others. “These are organisations that prioritise agility and have a high volume of decisions to make,” explains Matt, “and there’s likely a lot of money at stake.”

He says banks are good examples as they often have to make quick and accurate decisions on loans. “Because banks have a lot riding on decisions, and care a lot about both speed and accuracy, they’re among the leading adopters of the new process automation technology.

Matt believes that the barriers to successful digitalisation are lower than people imagine, and Appian’s software is extremely easy to learn.

Even if you have technical skills that are out of date, you can still be a certified expert on the Appian platform in a couple of months, he says, and right now there is a high demand for Appian expertise.

“Taking the course that makes you an expert is almost free, and our worldwide Appian community has grown by 222 percent in the past 12 months. This is an exciting time to be getting into low-code[i] software.”

 

Appian in action

Pepper Money, the largest non-bank lender in Australia and New Zealand, launched its first product on the Appian platform in New Zealand.

By choosing Appian, Pepper Money was able to build a new mortgage broker lending app for New Zealand, going from concept to production, in a market where they’d never had a presence before, in just three months.

Appian’s process technology allows applications for loans to be digitally turned around incredibly fast for customers.

To learn more about Appian’s Low-Code Platform and how it can deliver greater agility for your business go to: https://appian.com

 

[i] ‘Low code’ software empowers people to be developers, to be collaborators with machines, and to create a level of customer experience that businesses have not been able to achieve in decades. When designing new processes, developers use shapes – they drag and drop shapes onto palettes, just like a flowchart. Appian builds apps 10x faster, reduces maintenance costs by 50 percent, and delivers superior functionality compared to traditional development.

Share Article

NZBusiness Editorial Team
Follow Me Written By

NZBusiness Editorial Team

NZBusiness is a team effort, with article submissions curated by a small team of professionals under the guidance of Editor David Nothling-Demmer.

Other Articles

Asian Supermarket sml
Previous

New report: Asia Imported F&B Sector Insights

Healthy mind
Next

Why a healthy mind is becoming an employee’s best asset

Next
Healthy mind
November 17, 2022

Why a healthy mind is becoming an employee’s best asset

Previous
November 15, 2022

New report: Asia Imported F&B Sector Insights

Asian Supermarket sml

Subscribe to our newsletter

NZBusiness Digital Issue – March 2025

READ MORE

The Latest

A business journey from surgeon to CEO

May 9, 2025

Entries open for 2025 Sustainable Business Awards

May 8, 2025

The new concrete flooring system that won’t end up in landfill

May 8, 2025

The business of saving lives

May 7, 2025

Breaking the mould

May 6, 2025

A business built to last

May 6, 2025

Most Popular

NZBusiness Digital Issue – June 2024
Understanding AI
Navigating economic headwinds: Insights for SME owners
Nourishing success: Sam Bridgewater on his entrepreneurship journey with The Pure Food Co
Navigating challenges: Small business resilience amidst sales decline

Related Posts

Cyber security in 2025: A guide on how to protect your business

April 22, 2025

A family business built on trust, now with the support of AI

April 18, 2025

Building cyber resilience: A practical guide for small businesses

April 15, 2025

Modernising digital payment solutions

March 28, 2025
NZBusiness Magazine

New Zealand’s leading source for business news, training guides and opinion from small businesses to multi-national corporations.

© Pure 360 Limited.
All Rights Reserved.

Quick Links

  • Advertise with us
  • Magazine issues
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Sitemap

Categories

  • News
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Education & Development
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability

Follow Us

LinkedIn
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability