

Everybody is a potential enterprise application developer, given the right tooling abetted by a workbench that enforces development best practices.
Though the term “citizen developer” implies someone lacking in professional discipline, that’s not necessarily the case in practice. Many knowledge workers are skilled professionals who will apply by-the-book enterprise development practices if they’re given sufficient guidance, preferably inline to the tooling at their disposal.
Wikibon sees augmented programming as a key enterprise development trend, referring to model-driven, visual, and other “low code” approaches for accelerating developer productivity. Augmented programming drives automated code generation through high-level development abstractions, especially the use of machine learning and other artificial intelligence approaches.
Vendors have converged on the augmented programing arena from practically every direction. This is due to the strategic importance of making their core developer users more productive and also to ensure that they are well integrated into enterprise DevOps and governance workflows.
Owing to its longtime focus on model-driven development, Pegasystems Inc. has been at the forefront of augmented programming for many of its 36 years of existence. Within its Pega Platform, the vendor has long provided a sophisticated set of tools for low-code, model-driven, visual development.
Pegasystems is a longtime industry visionary vendor on these and other intelligent automation topics, with a keen emphasis on low-code tooling. So it was no surprise this week when Pegasystems prioritized this theme in the product announcements at its annual developer conference in Las Vegas.
Before more than 5,000 attendees in Las Vegas, Pegasystems launched Enterprise Low-Code Factory, a new development tool that is due to be available by the end of third quarter of 2019 and which is an integral component of the vendor’s AI-powered omnichannel Pega Platform. Enterprise Low-Code Factory gives a new generation of non-traditional, lower-skilled enterprise developers the tools to boost their productivity without sacrificing the software quality, consistency or compliance features needed to stand up their apps as production-grade enterprise assets.
The tool accomplishes the latter by embedding the following framework of controls — also known as “guardrails” — for guiding enterprise-wide app development and operationalization by users of all skill levels:
Pegasystems’ continued growth in sales, revenues and business adoption will depend on positioning Enterprise Low-Code Factory and its other augmented programming tools as productivity accelerators for developers of all skill levels. Likewise, it will need to expand the range of use cases — including real-time sentiment analysis and robotic process automation — that this tool can support.
With that in mind, Wikibon was impressed with other announcements that Pegasystems made this week that deepen its low-code use cases and bring other components of its diverse solution portfolio into a low-code model-driven development framework. Separate from Enterprise Low-Code Factory, Pegasystems made announcements that allow citizen developers to apply additional guardrails for building various types of intelligent apps in a model-driven low-code environment:
These latest announcements significantly deepen Pegasystems’ differentiation in the vast low-code development tool arena, and also in the DevOps segment focused on tools for continuous integration and continuous deployment of enterprise apps into cloud environments. With a “land and expand” strategy foremost, Pegasystems has built scalability into these embedded guardrails, enabling customers’ small single-function apps, built in Pega tools, to grow into multifunction environments for omnichannel, real-time customer engagement.
Though Wikibon is positive on Pegasystems’ offerings and strategy, we have concerns about its ability to innovate and partner effectively in the intelligent automation market.
First, Wikibon is disappointed that Pegasystems failed to align explicitly this low-code strategy to its established products for chatbots and virtual assistants, mobility, and robotic process automation. These technologies — along with cloud-native technologies such as Kubernetes and containers — are important components in enterprise intelligent edge strategies, which Pegasystems has so far not addressed comprehensively in its roadmap.
Also, we were hoping that Pegasystems would have incorporated a stronger data science DevOps workbench of its own into its low-code strategy. Considering that dozens of vendors now offer such tools in their various portfolios, it was astonishing that Pegasystems hasn’t at least acquired one of many strong machine learning pipeline automation offerings on the market and begun the process of integrating with its low-code and app factory tools.
Furthermore, we were surprised that Pegasystems didn’t announce any further integration with its cloud partners, most notably, Amazon Web Services, under its “Cloud Choice” program. Pegasystems has achieved impressive uptake of its own managed cloud service.
Though the flexibility that it offers to host customer deployments of its solutions on any public or private cloud platform is impressive, it would have made sense to discuss how — or whether — it plans to support hybrid and multicloud deployments of its digital transformation portfolio. More enterprises are adopting multicloud strategies, and will increasingly evaluate vendors on their support for managing complex data, workload, application, and networking capabilities across these infrastructures through a single visibility and control plane.
As it addresses these strategic challenges going forward, Pegasystems’ should retain its core focus on helping customers balance experience metrics against the bottom-line impacts of intelligent process automation. Pega’s focus on 360-degree journey modeling, and then using that to automate development and deployment of the enabling applications, is a key connective tissue in its go-to-market strategy. It is a key differentiator for the vendor for helping customers to align all their front-end engagement channels with backend processes in a unified enterprise architecture.
Pegasystems’ customer-centric vision is embedded in its corporate DNA. Here’s what Leon Trefler, senior vice president of global customer success at Pegasystems, had to say on Cube Conversations in May 2018 on a wide range of omnichannel customer engagement topics, including contextual next best action, journey modeling and robotic process automation:
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