Hi, I'm Jajoo, an engineer at Publicis Sapient. Today, I'm going to walk you through how we can use some of our Sapient Slingshot capabilities to build a mobile onboarding app for a commercial bank in just a few minutes. Let's dive in.
Let's begin with creating a backlog for the mobile app with epics and stories. As you can see, Slingshot helps us generate epics and stories based on industry best practices. This ensures we're building a journey that aligns with customer needs. We can refine this by modifying acceptance criteria. In this case, it's for a mobile banking app, but you can use this for any application for any industry.
Now that we have our epics and stories, let's move on to designing the app. Our spec-to-design prompts generate an initial design proposal, including UI components and accessibility considerations. We can review these elements and make adjustments before moving on to the next step.
So now that we have the design proposal, I can use Slingshot to generate an interactive wireframe based on our specifications, giving us a clear vision of the final product before development even begins.
Now, let's use our Slingshot code plugin, which generates production-ready code based on our design. In traditional development, this would take days or weeks, but Sapient Slingshot writes clean, efficient code that we can integrate with existing enterprise systems in seconds.
Security is also a top priority. Our security prompts automatically incorporate best practices for authentication, encryption, and data protection. We can review these settings and make any necessary adjustments before deploying the application.
With built-in testing, we can validate functionality, performance, and security before deployment. Automated regulatory and compliance checks ensure the app meets industry standards and runs smoothly. And just like that, we've built and deployed a secure commercial onboarding app with Slingshot. If you want to learn more, reach out for a live demo. Thanks for watching!
I don't even realize that because I used to live in Chicago, so this is like natural sounds to me.