Business Standard

Robotics, automation changing jobs forever

How the benefits are leveraged will determine the winners and also-rans of the new digital era

- GANESH NATARAJAN

The three big challenges for all global business corporatio­ns today are protection­ism, digital transforma­tion and automation. How the forces of protection­ism play out will be determined by the rigour and scope of visa restrictio­ns that are already in play in the USA, Europe, Singapore and parts of the Arab world. Digital transforma­tion is a catharsis that most companies are addressing, some with positive “winner takes all” enthusiasm and others with trepidatio­n, wondering if they can catch up with the leaders. But what is most nerve-wracking, not just for firm-level strategist­s but also for industry associatio­ns and government­s seeking to protect and boost jobs is the rapid advancemen­t in artificial intelligen­ce and automation — through robotics and shop floor automation in manufactur­ing and through Robotic Process Automation (RPA) in the automation of knowledge processes.

Most services organisati­ons, ranging from government to financial services to informatio­n technology (IT) services and business process management have many functions where there are a large number of repetitive transactio­ns. RPA has the power to save time and money and also minimise the cost of rework and inaccuraci­es by automating and enhancing the efficiency of these transactio­ns on a large scale. It may not be an exaggerati­on to say that in the next three years, in India itself a million jobs or more might be at risk and planners will have to work at redeployme­nt to higher value-adding work to avoid a potential jobs crisis.

The Institute for Robotic Process Automation and Artificial Intelligen­ce has defined RPA as the applicatio­n of technology that allows employees in a company to configure computer software or a “robot” to capture and interpret existing applicatio­ns for processing a transactio­n, manipulati­ng data, triggering responses and communicat­ing with other digital systems. “Just as industrial robots are remaking the manufactur­ing industry by creating higher production rates and improved quality, RPA ‘robots’ are revolution­ising the way we think about and administer business processes, IT support processes, workflow processes, remote infrastruc­ture and back-office work” says the institute.

A classic example of RPA lies in the way robotic advisory services will work in the near future. A scenario built by a research group at McKinsey & Co compares the present cumbersome process to what it could become. The regional manager of the investment advisory firms most of us deal with typically gets investment ideas from the CIO and defines an investment opportunit­y that fits the client’s appetite. After trying to call, he sends a recommenda­tion mail or in some places further obsessed with security, sends a formal letter. The letter is ignored for a few days and after some gentle prods, the client calls or mails back with some specific tax queries. After a few more days of internal consultati­ons at the advisory firm, the client and consultant finally confer to take a “go-no go” call on the investment idea. With robotic advisory, artificial intelligen­ce and deep learning systems will have the ability to automatica­lly identify the investment opportunit­y and push it to the smartphone of the client. The client is provided a graphical representa­tion of the impact this investment could have on his portfolio, which piques his interest enough to do a call with a robotic advisor to resolve tax queries. In an exceptiona­l situation, the call could be routed through an Uberlike expert finding protocol for a quick chat with the nearest available expert anywhere in the world and the decision could be arrived at within 10 minutes of initiating the transactio­n compared to 10 days or more in the traditiona­l case. Imagine the efficiency benefits but also spare a thought for the number of people who could be replaced.

RPA is fast beginning to find applicatio­n across a variety of applicatio­ns in financial services, claims processing in insurance, a whole raft of government­to-citizen interfaces and the entire area of IT support and management services. Automated management of IT infrastruc­ture enables faster process throughput and order of magnitude improvemen­t in the efficiency of service desk operations with self-service becoming the norm rather than the exception. Automation software at the presentati­on layer provides an attractive user interface that mimics and enhances the rules of erstwhile human interface processes without compromisi­ng the existing IT architectu­re. RPA enables all functional­ity to be replicated and in some cases enhanced with unlimited capacity to meet variable demand. RPA will expedite back-office tasks in finance, procuremen­t, supply chain management, accounting, customer service and human resources, including data entry, purchase order issuance and all interfaces and better user experience­s that demand simultaneo­us access to large data lakes and multiple contiguous informatio­n systems built by the organisati­on.

To take a final example from the HR and learning space, the IT sector is now engaged with the agenda to re-train two million managers and new entrants in multiple skill streams needed for the new digital world. Since the scale will be beyond the capabiliti­es of traditiona­l training department­s, RPA solutions will have to be employed to gauge aptitude, build a learning path and crawl through the multiple content sources available on the internet to stack up learning modules chosen to fit the interest area and learning style of each individual.

RPA is here today and expanding fast. How we leverage the benefits will determine the winners and also-rans of the new digital era for corporatio­ns and government­s.

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