Demystifying Myths About The Automation Operating Model
Demystifying Myths About The Automation Operating Model
Demystifying myths
about the automation
operating model
April 2019
Preface to thought paper
Intelligent Automation (IA) involves layering of automation and intelligent technologies, which transforms a
traditional workforce into an Intelligent Enterprise. However, while IA underpins a digital workforce, it also
results in certain new risks. It is expected that over the next decade, organisations will face a challenge in
developing effective operating models to manage this human-machine interaction efficiently.
In this series on ‘Intelligent Automation Strategy’, we will share our point of view on management of key
strategic considerations that has been refined and tested in the market, and has delivered value to our clients
in multiple industries.
Our first publication sets the tone by establishing the concept of and the need for an IA operating model and
by debunking certain myths in the market that hamper holistic adoption of IA by the C-suite.
In our subsequent publications, we will be delving deeper into the critical success factors for an IA programme.
~50%+
Unrealistic
expectations
during IA pilot(s)
Failure to scale
~25%+
EXPECTATIONS
IA programme
Expected ROI post pilot(s)
benefits
(e.g. FTE
reduction,
Operational
efficiency etc.) Possible abandonment
of IA programme
TIME
Technology Peak of Trough of Slope of Plateau of
Trigger Inflated Disillusionment Enlightenment Productivity
Expectations
‘Scale’ is the key here and not many organisations are successful in finding this.
1. h ttps://www.gartner.com/en/newsroom/press-releases/2018-11-13-gartner-says-worldwide-spending-on-robotic-process-automa-
tion-software-to-reach-680-million-in-2018
2. Forrester has estimated the number of digital workers — robots — that will be deployed over the next five years. See the Forrester
report “The RPA Market Will Reach $2.9 Billion By 2021.”
3. Gartner Hype Cycle - https://www.gartner.com/en/research/methodologies/gartner-hype-cycle
Automation provides great benefits, but it entails new Many organisations and several platform providers
ways of managing the digital workforce and related only focus on creating a technology operational rhythm
risks. The automation operating model therefore needs around their chosen platform, but do not pay attention
to be holistic in its approach to cover people, processes to strategic alignment, risk and governance, skill
and technology. development, and change management.
An operating model needs to be in sync with the • It should have adequate exposure to the organisation’s
strategy adopted by an organisation. Today, most of strategic initiatives
the discourse on automation equates an organisation’s
• It should have the necessary authority and ability to
structure with its operating model. This notion is
navigate the political landscape
incorrect as the former is a component of the latter.
• It should have the ability to run the programme in an
The overarching automation strategy of an organisation
agile manner that focuses on measurable outcomes,
decides which new capabilities need to be built or
continuous improvement and incorporation of lessons
bought for the organisation and which of its existing
learnt throughout the programme.
capabilities can be leveraged. A successful automation
programme requires certain key capabilities, viz. These considerations shape the model of an
automation strategy, governance, technology and organisation’s IA capability in a centralised,
infrastructure, demand management, bot development decentralised or federated, or hybrid manner.
and support, and automation change management. • A centralised organisational model places all
An organisation’s IA capability and its placement automation capabilities in a central entity (usually
(‘house’ for IA capability) in an organisation is known as a Centre of Excellence – CoE).
determined by the maturity of the organisation, the • A decentralised or federated organisational model
political landscape in which it operates and its places capabilities in individual business units, and
expected to-be state. For example, its automation gives them control and autonomy (usually known as
capability may find its home within an existing vertical Community of Practice – CoP).
such as ‘operations’, ‘process excellence’, ‘strategy’
• A hybrid organisational model is somewhere between
or ‘technology’. And if the organisation has an existing
the two models mentioned above.
shared services structure, which is a gold mine in
automation-use cases, perhaps it could house the This typically results in a situation wherein the
automation capability. automation journey may start with one of the variants
(mentioned above) and then evolve into a different one.
The chosen ‘house’ for IA capability should have some
So essentially, there is no one right answer.
key characteristics:
Process Re-engineering
CoE CoE / BU BU
(Resequencing steps/ Structuring input/ Removing waste)
Legend:
• CoE – Centre of Excellence
• IT – Information Technology Team
• BU – Business Unit
Prevalent literature uses the terms ‘Operating Model’ which includes multiple CoPs across different
and ‘CoE’ interchangeably. However, not only is this business units rather than a single CoE. We therefore
practice incorrect, but it can derail the programme in recommend that you look at all the organisational
the long run due to the focus on ‘who’ and ‘when’ rather structures consisting of a CoE or multiple CoPs
than ‘what’ and ‘how’. as ‘designated actors’ and the operating model as
the ‘approved script’. An analogy we have found useful
As mentioned earlier, a CoE relates to two of the three
is that of ‘the Constitution vs the Government’ wherein
organisational structures of the operating model used
the former is the Operating Model and the latter the
by an enterprise, and by definition, it is not applicable
CoE or CoPs.
to a decentralised or federated organisational structure,
Link between automation strategy and execution One of the key components in building an operating model
Overarching mechanism irrespective of type Applicable only when the organisational structure is
of automation organisation structure, viz. Centralised or Hybrid; not applicable for Federated model
Centralised, Federated or Hybrid
A blueprint to orchestrate automation strategy Comprises teams that carry out activities based on the
Operating Model
Aligned to the corporate strategy and vision of Aligned to the corporate culture of the organisation
the organisation
Answers the questions ‘what’, ‘how’, and ‘when’ Answers the question ‘who’
Therefore, it is essential not to equate the terms ‘establishing an Operating Model’ with ‘establishing a CoE’.
Intelligent automation delivers business value and it is increasingly becoming a key board-level agenda.
Establishing a stable and conducive operating model that supports effective management of the digital
workforce is what will differentiate the organisation from its peers. In this paper, we have attempted to set the
context for the automation operating model and to dispel some related myths. We believe there are finite critical
success factors that enable the organisation to harness the power of intelligent automation to deliver business
value with scale and speed. As part of our ‘Intelligent Automation Strategy’ series, we will be sharing our point
of view around these critical success factors.
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Contact us
Sumit Srivastav
Partner & Leader
Intelligent Automation
PwC India
[email protected]
Shaun Ryan
Partner & Leader
Intelligent Automation
PwC Australia and South East Asia
[email protected]
Abhijit Chavan
Senior Manager
PwC South East Asia
[email protected]
pwc.in
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