Bankhaus von der Heydt: Delivering New FinTech Products to Customers 10 x Faster
One of Europe s oldest banks delivers new FinTech products 10x faster and reduces onboarding from one week to 10 minutes with a low-code automation platform
Munich, Germany - April 15, 2021 - Appian (NASDAQ: APPN) today announced that Bankhaus von der Heydt is using Appian to automate back-office operations and grow its banking business through new FinTech offerings. The Appian Low-code Automation Platform enables the bank to launch and manage new financial products and services faster, and accelerate their new institutional client onboarding time. Using Appian, we were able to conquer new markets, gain significant market share, and deliver new products to our customers ten times faster than before, according to Philipp Doppelhammer, Managing Director and Member of the Management Board at Bankhaus von der Heydt.
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Bankhaus von der Heydt fuels blockchain and crypto business growth with Appian 5 hours ago
Source: Appian Appian (NASDAQ: APPN) today announced that Bankhaus von der Heydt is using Appian to automate back-office operations and grow its banking business through new FinTech offerings. The Appian Low-code Automation Platform enables the bank to launch and manage new financial products and services faster, and accelerate their new institutional client onboarding time.
“Using Appian, we were able to conquer new markets, gain significant market share, and deliver new products to our customers ten times faster than before,” according to Philipp Doppelhammer, Managing Director and Member of the Management Board at Bankhaus von der Heydt.
In recent times, there has been a flurry of activity around platform offerings targeted at users with little or development experience so-called citizen developers as well as still serving the needs of professional developers hard-pressed to deliver apps in extremely tight timeframes. This new generation of low-code and no-code platforms are designed to make it relatively easy for people to design, build, and launch applications quickly, without having to worry about the nuances of underlying operating systems or scalability requirements.
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Built on extended cloud-based Platform-as-a-service environments and low- and no-code platforms typically employ visual programming interfaces to solve business problems faster and more completely than could be accomplished with traditional software development. In the process, the productivity of professional developers will be enhanced as they are freed up to worry about more strategic infrastructure concerns affecting their ente
Press release content from PR Newswire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation.
University of Texas at Dallas Adds Low-code Intelligent Automation to 2021/2022 Curriculum
February 3, 2021 GMT
University uses the Appian Low-code Automation Platform to prepare students for careers in the new world of low-code Robotic Process Automation, Artificial Intelligence, and more
MCLEAN, VA, Feb. 3, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Appian (NASDAQ: APPN) announced that The University of Texas at Dallas (UTD) is using the Appian Low-code Automation Platform for a new curriculum course on Intelligent Automation for the 2021/2022 academic year. The course, led by Assistant Professor Gaurav Shekhar in the UTD Naveen Jindal School of Management, enables students to get “hands-on” with a low-code platform for complete automation. Students will learn to master skills including Process Orchestration, Process Modelling, Process Re-engineering, Robotic Process Automation, and Intelligent Document Pr
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For a lot of people, the first reaction experienced when exposed to the term ‘hyperautomation’ is the groaning sense of marketingspeak overload.
It’s almost as if the marcoms people get a sense of schadenfreude out of hitting us with these terms.
Do I really have to add it to my spellchecker, did this term come from the magical wizard analysts beginning with G, isn’t all automation essentially a hyper-driven piece of coding designed to apply AI, ML and RPA together at a pace faster than ever previously experiences… and anyway, shouldn’t it have a hyphen in it and be called hyper-automation in the first place?