Until a few months ago, domain experts who ciuldn't code would "make do" with some sort of Microsoft Excel Spreadsheet From Hell (MESFH), an unholy beast that would usually start small and then always grow up to become a shadow ERP (at best) or even the actual ERP (at worst).
The best part, of course, is that this mostly works, most of the time, for most busineses.
Now, the same domain experts -who still cannot code- will do the exact same thing, but AI will make the spreadsheet more stable (actual data modelling), more resilient (backup infra), more powerful (connect from/to anything), more ergonomic (actual views/UI), and generally more easy to iterate upon (constructive yet adversarial approach to conflicting change requests).
> AI will make the spreadsheet more stable
Hallucinations sure make spreadsheets nice and stable.
We have monthly presentations at my job and the business folk are really leaning into AI. The biggest win so far are them being able to generate new user experiences and get them into figma by themselves. They're able to test a design, get it into figma, generate some code, and get it in front of users without a developer or designer at all. It's not perfect but the tests show what we need to focus on vs what falls flat when put in front of users. It's very impressive and I'm proud of them.