Though automation is imperative and businesses are investing billions into it, results are mixed. Many firms are stuck in local optima without a consistently high level of automation across the enterprise.
Business and technology executives’ efforts to improve this situation are looking to achieve higher levels of automation are slowed down by organizational inertia, existing vendor commitments and complex compliance criteria.
Now, they are further confused by the emergence of generative AI which promises easier process automation but has limited track record and poses new compliance and data security challenges.
AIMultiple offers a step by step approach to enable enterprise automation with effective IT and business collaboration, taking advantage of the latest advances such as generative AI.
Challenges with existing automation approaches
One-third to a half of process automation (e.g. robotic process automation) projects fail, leaving businesses in one of these situations at low levels of enterprise-wide automation as seen in the featured image.1
- Risk-averse: These businesses remain stuck with manual processes because of procurement or automation projects getting stuck due to one or a combination of factors:
- Complex data privacy and security compliance criteria
- Difficulty of choosing among hundreds of options
- Complex buying criteria taking into account many parameters of automation
- Limited individual incentives for higher automation adoption
- Constant firefighting draining team’s time away from automation projects
- Shadow IT: Individual employees leveraging various tools for increased automation resulting in compliance and data security risks and manual copy paste to keep business running.
- IT-led automation: IT promoting compliant automation platforms. Though some offer low-code options, platforms target developers, leading to IT being the automation bottleneck.
Principles to collaborative enterprise automation
Businesses and their markets are constantly evolving. To achieve higher levels of business process automation, businesses need to
- flexibly adopt new technologies in a compliant manner
- leverage their entire workforce in process automation.
Here are our principles to achieve these:
- No bottlenecks: Automation can’t wait for IT. Individuals that serve at the intersection of systems and business (e.g. system admins, analysts, process specialists) need to be empowered with the right tools and incentives to implement automation using low-code enterprise automation software. This approach
- reduces reliance on IT
- speeds up automation
- reduces communication issues
- helps tech teams focus on higher value added issues
- Enterprise automation platform: Every enterprise needs an enterprise automation software which needs to provide
- API and UI automation capabilities: While API integrations are scalable and robust, not every system (e.g. legacy systems) provide API access. The ability to offer both automation capabilities enables the solution provider to cover most automation cases. UI automation is also called robotic process automation (RPA). These automation capabilities need to be supported by orchestration / business process management (BPM) capabilities so they are easily deployed across the enterprise.
- Low-code UI which can provide scalable automation solutions. Without this, IT becomes the automation bottleneck.
- Generative AI support: Generative AI use cases exist in every business domain and an enterprise automation platform does not need to provide support for each such case. However, a critical feature is to facilitate automation development with generative AI features. For example, these are functionality that the enterprise automation platform can provide:
- Prompt-to-automation: Building a draft automation solution based on a prompt
- Next best action(s): Using thousands of automation examples, these platforms can suggest next best actions to developers.
- Data security and compliance in line with your enterprise’s requirements.
- Integrations to your enterprise’s key systems of record and other critical applications
- Flexible and effective AI procurement: AI and enterprise generative AI need to be indispensable parts of every enterprises’ automation strategy. Enterprises should be able to adopt new AI solutions with ease. This requires a unique approach customized for AI procurement. Explore AIMultiple’s recommendations for your firm’s approach to
- People first: There are numerous human aspects of achieving a high level of automation across the enterprise. Some of these are:
- Iterative: The word transformation may be doing more harm than good as it encourages enterprises to overhaul their way of work which leads to friction, inertia and overblown expectations. Large firms should aim to be constantly improving their way of work and aim to increase their momentum as their automation campaigns deliver results
- Well-communicated: Automation creates uncertainty for those whose tasks are getting automated. The purpose of the automation program, its goals and how employees’ work will be impacted should be clearly and frequently communicated.
Optional aspects of collaborative enterprise automation
Intelligent / cognitive automation
While intelligent capabilities are required in developing automation solutions (e.g. suggesting next-best-actions during development process), enterprise automation software can not be expected to provide all machine learning capabilities of a modern enterprise since AI systems are becoming increasingly specialized. The important capability is integrations not intelligent modules for every enterprise need.
Intelligent document automation (IDP)
Documents are one of the weak spots of enterprises since they hold significant data but are hard to automate.
AIMultiple’s recommendation is to find the right best of breed solutions in line with your businesses’ document automation needs rather than evaluating enterprise automation software in terms of their document extraction or processing capabilities.
This is a working document from AIMultiple and we are open to feedback. Please leave a comment or reach out to the author with your suggestions.
- “Five design principles to help build confidence in RPA implementations“, EY, Accessed July 24, 2023
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