I work at a large non-profit. I'm not a coder, but I'm IT literate, and know enough about database design to not do absolutely stupid things. I'm happy to document processes enjoy clarifying ideas.
We use Sharepoint. In many many respects Sharepoint is detestable garbage, but I have managed to create some really quite complex automated workflows which are saving people in the organisation a lot of time, using Sharepoint Designer (no coding). It's documented, fairly robust and I wouldn't have been able to write it in a conventional language.
I'd say you're at least some kind of coder. My point is that there will always be room in an organization for people like us, who aren't afraid to go down and use our tools to the fullest extent, to save "people in the organization" enormous amounts of time. These tools can be code or something else, but the point is clarifying ideas. The exact tool you use doesn't matter.
"No Code" is not an existential threat to developers, it's just another programming language.
I work at a large non-profit. I'm not a coder, but I'm IT literate, and know enough about database design to not do absolutely stupid things. I'm happy to document processes enjoy clarifying ideas.
We use Sharepoint. In many many respects Sharepoint is detestable garbage, but I have managed to create some really quite complex automated workflows which are saving people in the organisation a lot of time, using Sharepoint Designer (no coding). It's documented, fairly robust and I wouldn't have been able to write it in a conventional language.