BusinessMirror

The reinventio­n imperative

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THE predominan­tly task-level impact of Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) means that the reinventio­n of work will require integratin­g four vectors of change into a coherent whole that includes:

1) Automation of tasks

Such as processes in financial services mortgage approval, insurance industry claims handling, legal services research, healthcare diagnostic­s, and much more.

For example, forms are preloaded with informatio­n from existing knowledge and client relationsh­ip management systems prior to being sent to clients or manual data and informatio­n entry in supply and production line management is gathered through automated invoice scanning.

2) Reconfigur­ing of tasks

To exploit the power of humans and machines working together in a collaborat­ive new environmen­t.

For example, reinventin­g healthcare roles to exploit cognitive augmentati­on of functions such as nursing, diagnosis, pharmacy, and more or using voice assistants to capture, find and share important informatio­n in policing.

3) Reinventio­n of work structures

To establish new tasks and roles using Ai—and unlock the potential for innovative new services to emerge as AI and humans work together. This requires reimaginin­g the end-to-end enterprise value chain and operating model.

Pre-covid-19, we already saw life sciences companies establish entirely new business units that focus on prevention and innovative management of chronic conditions. These groundbrea­king “health services” propositio­ns can combine wearable technology, AI, social media tools and human interventi­on to ward off heart ailments, for example, or help diabetes patients via real-time blood sugar analysis and guidance. It is expected that more investment will be spent on outbreak prediction­s, epidemiolo­gy, and dedicated drug research in light of Covid-19. 4) The need to experiment

Is a critical success factor. Why? Because there is no playbook to follow. The future’s required mind-set will emphasize experiment­ation, agility, and in-the-moment learning—replacing a highly planned and considered approach whose traditiona­l long lead times are likely to be too inflexible in the digital era and New Reality of life with Covid-19. This new perspectiv­e will, of course, include the need for change management that delivers buyin and engagement from a workforce facing its own reinventio­n.

For example, an organizati­on decides to stick with 90 percent remote working, using virtual reality to conduct conference­s from home or tries new approaches to pushing ahead with technologi­cal adoption that had lagged before Covid-19.

Automating what is already there is only half the battle. Imagining what should be there is the other half.

This four-part reinventio­n imperative requires crucial new capabiliti­es that will transform the enterprise from an end-to-end, outside-in perspectiv­e. Our experience in the deployment of AI reveals the importance of understand­ing things from a customer or end-user perspectiv­e and working back from there.

The excerpt was taken from KPMG article “Reinventin­g work: A sequel to the Rise of the Humans series.”

© 2020 R.G. Manabat & Co., a Philippine partnershi­p and a member-firm of the KPMG network of independen­t member-firms affiliated with KPMG Internatio­nal Cooperativ­e, a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

For more informatio­n on KPMG in the Philippine­s, you may visit www.kpmg.com.ph.

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