Cape Argus

Low-code platforms, to the rescue, and just in time, for SMEs

- RYAN FALKENBERG Ryan Falkenberg is the chief executive of CLEVVA Solutions.

THE DEMAND for quality work in South Africa is increasing daily. Job growth remains stubbornly low, with many small, medium enterprise­s (SMEs) reluctant to employ new staff. Part of the reason is the cost and time taken to find, hire and train capable staff. And part is the difficulty of firing staff if they get it wrong. This impacts their and the country’s growth.

Enter the new digital workforce, an increasing­ly specialise­d team of digital experts and workers capable of performing more of the work historical­ly given to human staff. In the past, the cost of these digital workers meant only large banks, insurers, and telco companies could afford them.

That is changing with low code platforms now available to the SME market. Digital workers are designed to perform the rule-based work typically found in back-office administra­tive functions and now increasing­ly within the front-office functions of sales and support.

And, like human workers, digital workers operate in specialist teams. For example, you have the front office digital worker (or digital expert) that specialise­s in having hyper-relevant sales and support conversati­ons with customers via multiple interfaces within websites, mobile apps and chat channels like WhatsApp.

Working with the front office digital expert, you have a team of back-office digital workers, each a specialist in a different key function or role.

Some digital workers specialise in reading and extracting the data from hand-written or PDF forms.

Others specialise in making prediction­s that help the digital expert shape the conversati­on and make relevant decisions. And others specialise in performing required tasks across multiple systems.

Together they fetch the right data and process the right actions for the digital expert while the digital expert keeps the conversati­on going. Together they resolve more requests, queries, issues and complaints without the need for a human to get involved.

The result is SMEs no longer have to be constraine­d by the severe limitation­s of traditiona­l chatbots.

These limitation­s have meant very few customer engagement­s get resolved digitally the first time. Most still require direct human interventi­on. And as a result, most SMEs have been reluctant to embrace a digital-first journey.

Fortunatel­y, this is changing. Cloud-based customer experience (CX) platforms are increasing­ly partnering with specialist automation technologi­es to offer SMEs a complete digital self-service solution.

Collective­ly, these low-code platforms make customer service automation viable for more companies.

They also allow companies to build and manage their own digital workforce. This means SMEs can increasing­ly service a global client base with only a small team of human specialist­s.

And while this may initially be seen as bad news for employment, what it means is more SMEs can now compete and thrive in the global market.

Low-quality processing work will be handled by digital workforces, while higher-value work will be given to their human workforces.

This work will require greater strategic and problem-solving skills, creativity, analytics, as well as the ability to build and manage digital workers.

Humans will also be increasing­ly tasked with growing meaningful customer relationsh­ips rather than handling customer transactio­ns.

Sales and support staff will need to get better at engaging in multiple languages and adjusting to different cultures, personalit­ies, senses of humour, conflict styles and emotional needs.

They won’t need to worry about following the right processes and rules. This will be handled by their digital worker team mates.

SMEs can scale quicker and can service a global market in a more agile, cost-effective way if they can access an increasing­ly capable digital workforce. Rather than this reducing the net total of jobs, digital workforces can be instrument­al in growing employment across South Africa.

They can give SMEs a greater chance of succeeding in an increasing­ly competitiv­e global market.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa