{"id":4073,"date":"2018-08-02T22:59:00","date_gmt":"2018-08-02T22:59:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/projects\/horsesforsources\/hyper-connected-intelligent-automation_082618\/"},"modified":"2021-12-03T07:02:46","modified_gmt":"2021-12-03T07:02:46","slug":"hyper-connected-intelligent-automation_082618","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/hyper-connected-intelligent-automation_082618\/","title":{"rendered":"Tinker, experiment, explore, then disrupt: The Hyper-Connected Enterprise will be driven by Intelligent Automation."},"content":{"rendered":"
As business operations have advanced through several inflections points over the last three decades, the core component at the heart of these changes has been the emergence of digital interactivity driving the hyper-connected global business – only made possible by intelligent automation.<\/p>\n
Digital connectivity has transformed both front and back offices over the last three decades. The key now is to integrate and automate<\/em> these activities to place the customer at the core of business operations<\/strong><\/p>\n As you can see in our (below) “voyage to hyper-connected, interactive enterprise” we have leveraged digital connectivity to drive productivity and innovation across both the back and front offices of our organizations. Offshoring and outsourcing became a huge bi-product of digital connectivity to run business processes and apps remotely to save Western businesses huge costs through global labor and centralization of resources.<\/p>\n However, until recently, most of these activities have been restricted to improving efficiencies and reducing costs. At the front end of the business, the advent of ecommerce hit its stride in the late ’90s, where customers could communicate digitally with organizations to make purchases, make genuine inquiries and get connected with others with like-minded business interests. Where automation comes into play is being able to pull together these disparate front and back office activities into one single office (aka the HFS Digital OneOffice<\/a>), where customer needs are placed front and center across all business processes, where staff performance can be measured on delivering customer driven outcomes, where the entire business operations are in-tune with their customer needs… and superior to those of their competitors to stay ahead of the game. <\/p>\n The urgency to be Hyper-Connected dictates why we have to drive Automation with real Intelligence<\/strong><\/p>\n “Basic digital” capabilities (where most companies are today) make it possible for business operations to respond to their customers as those needs happen. Emerging capabilities in data analytics tools, machine learning and cognitive computing are making it possible to anticipate<\/em> changing customer needs before they happen, where shifts in global supply chains, market and competitive dynamics, economic or political changes, compliance or regularity issues, all combine to change customer behavior. <\/p>\n The more intelligent<\/em> your business operations, the more you can stay ahead of the game, but none of this is possible if your processes are not automated effectively to create this knowledge for your business operators:<\/p>\n Click to Enlarge<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n Once the digital baseline is created, enterprises need to create more intelligent bots to perform more sophisticated tasks than repetitive data and process loops. This means having unattended and attended interactions with data sources both inside and outside<\/em> of the enterprise. <\/p>\n From Experimenting to Disrupting: Cracking the Intelligent Automation code in Four Stages<\/strong><\/p>\n The industry is struggling to solve challenges around the process, change, talent, training, infrastructure, security, and governance. There is deafening noise and hype around Intelligent Automation, but there are very few enterprises that have cracked the code of driving transformative impact by leveraging Intelligent Automation at an industrial scale. Why?<\/p>\n Our research and ongoing conversations over the last six years (remember our ‘Greetings from Robotistan’<\/a> in 2012?) in the automation space has allowed us to interact, help, and follow automation initiatives at several global 2000 enterprises. And we leveraged this extensive experience to develop HFS’ Intelligent Automation Maturity Model (see exhibit below). Our experience suggests that the organizational maturity and the resultant impact from intelligent automation typically follow four stages of evolution:<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
\n