Udacity<\/a>) and other discrete training opportunities as the pressure builds to stay relevant in the face of emerging tech.<\/p>\n2019 will be the year of ‘how’.<\/strong> The why (customer experience, revenue impact, internal alignment) and what (emerging technologies) for transformation are now fairly clear after intense debate for the last couple of years. But “how” to go about executing on the aspirations is still a black hole. There will be many disappointments as exponential expectations are met with linear execution. Execution requires integration in every sense of the word – technology, talent, organizational change and leadership to achieve scale and deliver exponential benefits.<\/p>\nSuccess will be defined by effective digital change management versus digital adoption.<\/strong> There is an increased realization that simply throwing money at a new technology will not yield the desired results, but spending time in developing a method to the madness will drive success.<\/p>\nEmerging technologies<\/span><\/p>\n“Big iron” software firms will enter the RPA market. <\/strong>They have ignored RPA far too long and we saw SAP starting to make a move in 2018 acquiring a little-known RPA product Contextor. In 2019, mega ISVs such as Microsoft and\/or leading systems of records like Oracle will acquire some RPA product challengers such as Kofax, Softomotive, Redwood, or Workfusion. The big three (Automation Anywhere, Blueprism, and UiPath) will likely remain untouchable.<\/p>\nRPA-as-a-service will get traction in 2019.<\/strong> RPA solutions will become increasingly function or process-specific to help enterprises scale. Today they are far too task specific. The push towards greater process and function focus will enable broader solutions and necessitate complementary technology integration like ML and NLP. RPA will certainly start to be smarter and the solutions will look more like the custom solutions coming from the service providers.<\/p>\nAI as a term will get tiresome and we will revert to something more meaningful. <\/strong>This is heading towards more combined applications of foundational AI building blocks to solve specific business problems. One of the “big four” mega-ISV firms (Amazon, Google, Microsoft, IBM) will pull ahead (likely Microsoft) in the AI arms race because of their deep investments and partnerships to offer the most comprehensive marketplace for enterprise AI deeply tied to cloud migration.<\/p>\nAutoML and XAI will gather momentum.<\/strong> If AI is to have true business-ready capabilities, it will only succeed if we can design the business logic behind it – and hence the need to design “explainable AI,” or XAI. The AutoML movement will also see traction as technology continues to become more accessible, resulting in a host of new companies getting started with AI despite limited resources.<\/p>\nBlockchain will come out of the closet<\/strong> as ecosystems across organizations that service the specific needs of a customer start to emerge. No single organization owns the entire customer experience and competitors and peers will have to start to figure out how to collaborate. Blockchain will provide the way to make it happen.<\/p>\nCybersecurity will become a C-level priority<\/strong> versus the current mid-level management headache. Most enterprises understand the importance of securing their data but lack of C-level management commitment to effective investment is a key inhibitor of an enterprise’ security readiness. This will (hopefully) change in 2019.<\/p>\nMost enterprises and providers will realize that they will never be ‘cloud-only’ <\/strong>due to legacy workflows dependent on traditional on-premise kit. Cloud providers opening up the technical debt further by running towards newer more efficient platforms – migrating from one to the other is a pipe dream. Assuming the pipe is loaded with crack!<\/p>\nThe smart providers will invest more in hybrid cloud platforms<\/strong> to help clients simplify the growing (expensive) chaos of multi-cloud environments. More so now due to the increased differentiation of hyperscale players forcing clients to build relationships with all of them for best in breed cloud.<\/p>\nOpen-source technologies embed further into enterprise<\/strong> becoming a pillar of the modern technology stack. As CIOs are pushed to avoid lock-in to expensive and rigid proprietary tech.<\/p>\nEmerging players to watch in 2019<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nHFS Hot Vendors. <\/strong>Niche players with differentiated value propositions for the OneOffice will continue to proliferate. We will be keenly watching how the 17 HFS Hot Vendors profiled in Q1-Q3 2018 perform in 2019 (also watch out for the Q4 edition of HFS Hot Vendors in the new year)<\/em> <\/p>\n <\/p>\n
Service Provider Landscape<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nSeveral traditional service providers will merge<\/strong> as market for services becomes unsustainable for so many commodity firms – right across business process and IT lines. Expect M&A activity involving the likes of Conduent, DXC, and NTT Data which all currently suffer from lack of market differentiation.<\/p>\nLarge commodity call centers lose to smaller more nimble contact center players.<\/strong> Large commodity players have done precious little to add value beyond the FTE model will lose to smaller contact center vendors that have invested in premium tech services (such as RPA and chatbots) and nearshore delivery in their portfolio.<\/p>\nThe boundaries between service offerings will blend into each other. <\/strong>Consulting and managed services will get diffused. The big 4 will start to offer more managed services and the leading SIs will continue to invest and expand their advisory services. “Fr-enemy relationships” will start to get established!<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Each year we promise no more predictions but it’s a habit we just can’t kick. So have 19 of them…<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":2389,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[855,852],"tags":[303],"organization":[],"ppma_author":[19],"class_list":["post-2388","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-blockchain","category-intelligent-automation","tag-enterprise-irregulars"],"yoast_head":"\n
19 Predictions for 2019: Integrated Automation replaces Digital as the industry's focal point - Horses for Sources | No Boundaries<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n