Are you ready for RPA? Here’s three RPA tests:

“I was customer number 30,” Jon Theuerkauf told us. Before he was with RPA company Blue Prism, he was at BNY Melon — Bank of New York Melon, where he was managing director and group head of managing excellence. It was in this role that he studied the form, as it were for installing a RPA system. After running what he calls a horse race, comparing RPA systems, he selected Blue Prism: “We won two national awards for innovation and automation” he says. That makes him qualified to talk about RPA tests, to see if a company is ready.

“I joined Blue Prism as an intern,” he claims, a bit like Robert De Niro in the movie of that name, when an aged and bored De Niro joins an Internet start-up headed by Anne Hathaway, as a rather mature intern. “I told Alistair (Alastair Bathgate, Chief Executive Officer & Co- Founder of Blue Prism), he looks nothing like Anne Hathaway.”

It seems to this writer, that Jon was a bit more than an intern, maybe more like something of a godfather in the business of understanding customer needs in RPA. And that is why we listened when he outlined three RPA tests he would look at to see if they are ready.

RPA: the key players, and what’s unique about them

We sat down with some of the key players in RPA: Automation Anywhere, NICE, UiPath, Blue Prism, Kofax, and Another Monday; to ask: ‘what’s special about you’?

RPA test one:

“What’s your culture for change like in the organisation? For example, every company has gone through multiple changes in some form or another. What is your success rate at delivering those visions, those change initiatives, and what’s your hit rate?”

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RPA test two:

“Are you involved in other major changes going on? For example, if you’re involved in a major acquisition or you’re getting ready to do a big ER piece switchover platform, don’t even think about it. You don’t need the noise. You won’t get the attention. You’re not going to do any of these things because it’s just not going to have the focus. And the tech environment won’t be right, your process environment won’t be right, people’s heads won’t be in the right space.”

Signavio and Xeelo join Blue Prism’s new affiliate Technology Alliance Partnerships

Signavio and Xeelo join Blue Prism’s Technology Alliance Program strengthening an its array of technology and independent software vendors

RPA test three:

“Do you have the fundamental resources that you need to be able to take on bringing in a digital workforce into your environment. Can you make the changes that you need in order to ensure that the digital workforce environment work is going to be fully optimised and provide returns, whether it’s financial, or customer satisfaction scores, or productivity?

“People think they can do it on the cheap and there are different ways to scale, but you need to make sure that you plan for those things. And it’s okay to have a one, two, or three-year strategy.

“I had a 5-year plan at Bank of New York Melon, and built my financial models off of those things with milestones deliverable after year one, two, three and four.”

Or to put it another way, you are ready when you have the available resources to invest in the project, and it needs focus.

 

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Michael Baxter

.Michael Baxter is a tech, economic and investment journalist. He has written four books, including iDisrupted and Living in the age of the jerk. He is the editor of Techopian.com and the host of the ESG...