Gulf News

Mideast braces for large-scale robotic process automation

UiPath to partner with universiti­es towards a curriculum enhanced by automation and AI

- BY NAUSHAD K. CHERRAYIL Staff Reporter

The uptake of Robotic Process Automation (RPA) by businesses in the Middle East has been slow but they are on the verge of making large deployment­s, the CEO of a Romanian start-up said.

RPA is the use of software with artificial intelligen­ce (AI) tools to automate high-volume and repetitive manual tasks in the enterprise sector that previously required human input.

Daniel Dines, co-founder and CEO of robotic software platform UiPath, said that RPA helps enterprise­s raise their productivi­ty, compliance and process efficiency levels.

According to research firm Gartner, global spending on RPA software is estimated to grow 57 per cent year-on-year to $680 million (Dh2.5 billion) this year and 57 per cent over the next year — en route to touching $2.4 billion in 2022.

Dines said that Dubai is the right example as it has voiced its determinat­ion to go paperless by 2021.

‘Automation is a mindset’

“A few years ago, ‘mobile first’ was the mantra and then came ‘cloud first’ but according to me, it should be ‘automation first’. Automation is a mindset to make your processes more agile as [the] RPA software robot makes zero mistakes and costs a lot less than an employee,” he said.

He, however, does not believe that AI will overtake human jobs but, instead, says it will augment humans.

According to Gartner, AI will create 2.3 million jobs in 2020, while eliminatin­g only 1.8 million jobs.

“The ‘One Million Arab Coders’ initiative by the Dubai Future Foundation bodes well with us and my intention is to have one million students and 1,000 schools with RPA — globally — in the next three years,” Dines said.

In the region, he said UiPath will be partnering with Blackboard Educationa­l Technology and Services to set up centres supporting several regional universiti­es towards a curriculum enhanced by automation and AI. Dines said that software robots are easy to train and they integrate seamlessly into any system, adding that the process is as easy as learning Microsoft Excel.

Easy to learn

“The developmen­t of the software is not as complicate­d as Java and can be learnt easily,” he said.

Karan Dixit, vice-president for UiPath Middle East and Africa, said that the biggest adopters of RPA are banks, insurance companies, retail, logistics, utilities and telecommun­ications companies.

“We are already in talks with government entities in the region that want to take a lot of manual elements that their employees are stuck in automating.”

 ?? Clint Egbert/Gulf News ?? From left: Kulpreet Singh, managing director for the EMEA region at UiPath; Daniel Dines, co-founder and CEO; Karan Dixit, vice-president for the EMEA region; and Anand Nagwani, vice-president for partnershi­ps in the EMEA region at a press conference in Dubai yesterday.
Clint Egbert/Gulf News From left: Kulpreet Singh, managing director for the EMEA region at UiPath; Daniel Dines, co-founder and CEO; Karan Dixit, vice-president for the EMEA region; and Anand Nagwani, vice-president for partnershi­ps in the EMEA region at a press conference in Dubai yesterday.

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