Technology applications for people with little programming
experience -- known as "no-code" or "low-code" in Silicon Valley
-- have attracted fresh funding during the pandemic to help
overcome a bottleneck created by a surge in e-commerce and the
digitization of businesses amid a shortage of coders.
Emmanuel Straschnov, Bubble co-founder, said he and his partner
started the company in New York in 2012 as the city was seeing a
jump in tech startups but entrepreneurs with expertise in
different industries with good ideas were struggling to find
programmers to help them launch their companies.
Bubble's platform allows entrepreneurs to build web applications
like Airbnb or Twitter without relying on engineers, he said.
Today it has more than 1 million users worldwide and has tripled
its revenue in the past year, the company said.
Straschnov declined to disclose the company's latest valuation.
He said the funding would be used to hire more engineers and
launch "boot camps" to teach students and others how to use
Bubble.
(Reporting By Jane Lanhee Lee; editing by Richard Pullin)
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