Bangkok Post

UiPath looks to AI automation

- SUCHIT LEESA-NGUANSUK

UiPath, a US-based enterprise automation and software company, is shifting from robotic process automation to become an artificial intelligen­ce (AI) automation platform to help businesses innovate and be more productive.

Thailand is an important market for AI-powered automation in AsiaPacifi­c, according to the company.

UiPath plans to invest more in Thailand as one of its robust markets, given the government’s promotion of AI as part of its national strategy, while enterprise­s are keen on leveraging AI to transform their businesses, said Jess O’Reilly, area vice-president for Asia. She was speaking at the UiPath AI-Powered Summit in Bangkok yesterday as part of the company’s roadshows in 15 cities across Asia-Pacific.

Ms O’Reilly said local enterprise­s are actively innovating and accelerati­ng technology adoption by piloting AI projects. UiPath sees this as an opportunit­y to serve them with AI automation to help them in largescale projects.

Moreover, Thailand is becoming an ageing society with a declining workforce, resulting in the need for greater adoption of automation and AI systems, she said.

UiPath has partnered with the government and organisati­ons to automate repetitive tasks that are probably low value and help employees focus more on creative and strategic areas.

The company has completely transforme­d from a robotic process automation company to provide tasks and robotic activities on its AI automation platform, said Ms O’Reilly.

By combining the automation system with AI power, organisati­ons will have the capability to understand, automate and operate end-to-end processes and improve overall efficiency and productivi­ty. This will impact top-line revenue and increase satisfacti­on of employees and customers, she said.

AI transforma­tion is now top of mind as business leaders are looking to turn AI potential into concrete results.

According to the company’s automation generation survey in March 2023 covering 6,460 employees in eight countries, 58% of office workers want more digital tools like AI and automation to do better jobs, while 48% of office workers who use automation solutions report greater productivi­ty and 36% say they have a better work-life balance.

This decade of AI-powered automation will increase global GDP by US$7 trillion through improved productivi­ty, according to UiPath.

The company also introduced a new family of large language models to help customers unlock the full potential of generative AI and transform their business environmen­t to meet their unique needs.

The Extended Languages Optical Character Recognitio­n feature can digitise documents in over 200 languages and is now available in Thai.

 ?? ?? Ms O’Reilly, right, and Tomur Ho, director of sales engineerin­g (Asia) at UiPath, at the company’s roadshow in Bangkok.
Ms O’Reilly, right, and Tomur Ho, director of sales engineerin­g (Asia) at UiPath, at the company’s roadshow in Bangkok.

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