Developers reportedly spend a significant portion of their time creating internal tools, with larger companies seeing this figure rise to 45% for developers in enterprises with over 5000 employees. Despite the productivity benefits these tools aim to provide, many developers opt to build custom applications from scratch using popular programming languages and frameworks like JavaScript, React, and Angular, which can be time-consuming. While low-code solutions offer a faster alternative and are favored by those who adopt them, many developers remain hesitant, driven by a sense of pride and the desire for ownership over their work. The article argues that embracing low-code tools could reallocate developer resources towards more innovative, customer-facing projects, suggesting that doing so could prove more cost-effective for businesses while still allowing developers to customize and maintain a sense of ownership over their projects.