Intelligent Process Automation (IPA)
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An Intelligent Process Automation (IPA) is a digital transformation initiative for the integration of AI techniquees with robotic process automation (RPA) to enhance and automate complex business processes.
- Context:
- It can (typically) be used to automate repetitive, rule-based tasks while also incorporating AI to handle more complex decision-making processes.
- It can (often) improve operational efficiency, reduce human error, and free up human workers to focus on higher-value tasks by taking over routine and repetitive activities.
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- It can range from basic implementations that automate simple tasks to advanced systems that integrate multiple AI technologies for end-to-end process automation.
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- It can be implemented in industries such as finance, healthcare, manufacturing, and customer service, where there is a need to process large volumes of data or manage complex workflows.
- It can include the use of cognitive agents, which interact with users and learn from their behavior to improve performance over time.
- It can facilitate the redesign of existing business processes, leading to a more agile and responsive operational model.
- It can pose challenges related to the integration of new technologies with legacy systems, requiring careful planning and execution.
- It can require ongoing monitoring and maintenance to ensure the AI components continue to learn and adapt effectively.
- It can raise ethical considerations, such as the impact on jobs and the need for transparency in AI-driven decision-making processes.
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- Example(s):
- Financial Services IPA, where IPA is used to automate tasks such as loan processing, fraud detection, and customer support.
- Healthcare IPA, where IPA streamlines patient data management, supports diagnostic processes, and automates administrative tasks.
- Retail IPA, where IPA optimizes inventory management, automates supply chain operations, and enhances customer personalization.
- Telecommunications IPA, where IPA is used for automating network management, customer service, and billing processes.
- Counter-Example(s):
- Traditional Process Automation, where automation is limited to simple, rule-based tasks without the incorporation of AI.
- Manual Business Process Management, where all tasks and decisions are handled manually without any form of automation.
- Basic Robotic Process Automation (RPA), which automates tasks based purely on predefined rules, without the learning and adaptation capabilities provided by AI.
- See: AI-Supported Organizational Process Reengineering Project, Robotic Process Automation, Smart Manufacturing, Business Process Automation, Workflow, Automation, Software Developer.
References
2022
- (Wikipedia, 2022) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligent_automation Retrieved:2022-9-26.
- Intelligent automation, or alternately intelligent process automation, is a software term that refers to a combination of artificial intelligence (AI) and robotic process automation (RPA). Companies use intelligent automation to cut costs by using artificial-intelligence-powered robotic software to replace workers who handle repetitive tasks. The term is similar to hyperautomation, a concept identified by research group Gartner as being one of the top technology trends of 2020.
2021
- https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/mckinsey-digital/our-insights/intelligent-process-automation-the-engine-at-the-core-of-the-next-generation-operating-model
- QUOTE: ... In essence, IPA “takes the robot out of the human.” At its core, IPA is an emerging set of new technologies that combines fundamental process redesign with robotic process automation and machine learning. It is a suite of business-process improvements and next-generation tools that assists the knowledge worker by removing repetitive, replicable, and routine tasks. And it can radically improve customer journeys by simplifying interactions and speeding up processes.
IPA mimics activities carried out by humans and, over time, learns to do them even better. Traditional levers of rule-based automation are augmented with decision-making capabilities thanks to advances in deep learning and cognitive technology. The promise of IPA is radically enhanced efficiency, increased worker performance, reduction of operational risks, and improved response times and customer journey experiences. ...
- IPA in its full extent encompasses five core technologies:
- Robotic process automation (RPA): a software automation tool that automates routine tasks such as data extraction and cleaning through existing user interfaces. The robot has a user ID just like a person and can perform rules-based tasks such as accessing email and systems, performing calculations, creating documents and reports, and checking files. RPA helped one large insurance cooperative to reduce excess queue procedures affecting 2,500 high-risk accounts a day, freeing up 81 percent of FTEs to take on proactive account-management positions instead.
- Smart workflow: a process-management software tool that integrates tasks performed by groups of humans and machines (for instance, by sitting on top of RPA to help manage the process). This allows users to initiate and track the status of an end-to-end process in real time; the software will manage handoffs between different groups, including between robots and human users, and provide statistical data on bottlenecks.
- Machine learning/advanced analytics: algorithms that identify patterns in structured data, such as daily performance data, through “supervised” and “unsupervised” learning. Supervised algorithms learn from structured data sets of inputs and outputs before beginning to make predictions based on new inputs on their own. Unsupervised algorithms observe structured data and begin to provide insights on recognized patterns. Machine learning and advanced analytics could be a game changer for insurers, for example, in the race to improve compliance, reduce cost structures, and gain a competitive advantage from new insights. Advanced analytics has already been implemented extensively in leading HR groups to determine and assess key attributes in leaders and managers so as to better predict behaviors, develop career paths, and plan leadership succession.
- Natural-language generation (NLG): software engines that create seamless interactions between humans and technology by following rules to translate observations from data into prose. Broadcasters have been using natural-language generation to draft stories about games in real time. Structured performance data can be piped into a natural-language engine to write internal and external management reports automatically. NLG has been used by a major financial institution to replicate its weekly management reports.
- Cognitive agents: technologies that combine machine learning and natural-language generation to build a completely virtual workforce (or “agent”) that is capable of executing tasks, communicating, learning from data sets, and even making decisions based on “emotion detection.” Cognitive agents can be used to support employees and customers over the phone or via chat, such as in employee service centers. A UK auto insurer that uses cognitive technology saw a 22 percent increase in conversion rates, a 40 percent reduction in validation errors, and a 330 percent overall return on investment.
- QUOTE: ... In essence, IPA “takes the robot out of the human.” At its core, IPA is an emerging set of new technologies that combines fundamental process redesign with robotic process automation and machine learning. It is a suite of business-process improvements and next-generation tools that assists the knowledge worker by removing repetitive, replicable, and routine tasks. And it can radically improve customer journeys by simplifying interactions and speeding up processes.