

Different Architectural Approaches
Rapid creation of microservices and APIs, with services built, deployed, and managed independently.
According to Gartner, 88% of companies adopting Low-Code for microservices report a 40% reduction in development time, thanks to simplified integration with existing systems.
Implementation of DDD while remaining focused on business needs, enabling better collaboration between developers and business experts.
Accenture reports a 50% improvement in business process understanding, reducing software design errors.
Low-Code platforms (e.g. Outsystems) natively support microservices architectures, offering modularity and container-based deployments.
Organizations reduce time-to-production by 60%, while increasing their ability to scale applications without impacting existing services.
Development of cloud-native applications designed for scalability, with continuous deployments using Kubernetes and Docker.
Forrester indicates a 25% reduction in infrastructure costs and a 30% improvement in application response times.
Agility and responsiveness
Rapid response to business demands, building solutions in weeks rather than months.
Interoperability
Simplified integration with heterogeneous systems (ERP, CRM, databases) through API management.
Scalability
Easier scaling and reduced technical deb
Security-by-design mechanisms and IT governance tools for auditing, compliance, and role management.
Low-Code is becoming a core building block for modernizing enterprise architectures—enhancing scalability, interoperability, and agility—while reducing development costs and delivery timelines.