The company was born from the collaboration between Clément and Frédéric Marianne, two brothers returned to Reunion to make their contribution to the Reunion building of tech and entrepreneurship.
The no-code approach allows you to create software, sites and applications intuitively via graphical interfaces. By relieving yourself of the need to code, this approach allows companies to be more agile and entrepreneurs to realize their ideas more easily. Gartner, company expert in IT research and analysis, estimates that 500 million apps will be created by 2024 ! More, with only 0,3% of the world's population knows how to code, this need cannot be satisfied by traditional programming methods. It is therefore estimated that 65% of these applications will be developed using no-code tools.. Management software, marketplaces, applications mobiles, websites or automation of recurring tasks : the applications of no-code are vast and promising. “We want to bring the no-code revolution to Reunion Island, because we are convinced that making this technology accessible to all is an incredible lever for the development of our island. Likewise, we believe that Reunion has a role to play on the national and international scene in the field of tech and no-code”, say Clément and Frédéric Marianne.
Face-to-face training open to all
After having trained and supported several clients in mainland France, in Belgium, in the United States or in Morocco (remotely from Reunion), Clément and Frédéric Marianne provided their first local training “Creating your website in no-code with Webflow”, October 6 in Lizine de Sainte-Marie. This training was designed for anyone who wishes to develop a website or the start of an e-commerce site independently and without having to master the complexities of coding.. “It is only the first in a long series. After creating websites, we will launch training courses on Notion, Make or Airtable. The goal : automate your tasks and be efficient on a daily basis, always without writing a line of code”, warn Clément and Frédéric Marianne.