Copyright © 2021 ValleyMedia, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part of any text, photography or illustrations without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or illustrations. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the magazine and accordingly, no liability is assumed by the publisher thereof.APRIL - 05 - 2021, Volume 07 - Issue 04 (ISSN 2644-240X) Published by ValleyMedia, Inc. To subscribe to CIO ApplicationsVisit www.cioapplications.com *Some of the Insights are based on the interviews with respective CIOs and CXOs to our editorial staffEditorial2021: The Maturation Year for RPARobotic Process Automation (RPA) tool adoption has soared during the past couple of years. If anything, the pandemic gave organizations added motivation to automate in general - especially around mundane tasks, the type that are in RPA's sweet spot. Gartner recently reported that spending on RPA software will top $1.5 billion this year and continue to grow by double-digit percentage terms for the foreseeable future. Deloitte has previously projected that RPA will hit nearly universal adoption in the business world at some point in 2023. There are lots of other lofty stats and anecdotal evidence that tell a similar story.The community of global system integrators (GSIs) and audit-based counseling organizations will motivate and train a huge number of laborers to embrace automation. Furthermore, GSIs will do as such similarly they did with enterprise resource planning (ERP) software in the 1990s. These organizations perceive that the automation industry is ready for explosive development and see an undeniable opportunity to sell business systems and enable services to help their customers to receive new rewards, much like they once did with ERP.Further, Software robots will automate the work of most of the people by taking the unpredictable, dreary and monotonous tasks. This can prompt a mix of both manual and automation efforts. The eventual fate of RPA will see the use of modern innovations, for example, Advanced Data, Analytics Business Process Automation, Artificial Intelligence, Blockchain, Optical Character Recognition (OCR), etc. joined with RPA to offer powerful automation. We can likewise expect an expanded development with robotic process automation companies.Ultimately, the trends unfolding in the next year presage an evolution not just toward a maturing of RPA but toward broader automation across the enterprise. Your organization will need to bring governance and orchestration to the table to keep all of its automation plates spinning, and you'll need to scrutinize how your manual processes work today if you expect to purpose fit automation not just to your current processes but to the underlying business needs. That's ultimately the key to evolving RPA from initial pilot projects into full-scale deployments. The whole automation market must address this with processes and operations that help improve the employee experience that is crucial for increasing morale, engagement, and productivity.Let us know your thoughts.Joe PhillipManaging Editoreditor@cioapplications.comJoe PhillipManaging EditorJoe PhillipSalesSebastian Jacobsebastian@cioapplications.comEmailsales@cioapplications.comeditor@cioapplications.commarketing@cioapplications.comGraphics & ArtVictor CruzEditorial StaffBen JacksonDaniel HolmesEzra BenjaminJune MichaelRose DcruzSenior WritersClara MathewLeah JaneRoyce D'Souza
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