Automation intrigues and daunts business owners. Embracing it requires a leap of faith, with successes and failures. A pivotal choice for growth or challenge.
1. Technology: The foundation for growth
From e-discovery solutions to automation in contract drafting and trademark search, intelligent automation can help law firms become more efficient and productive. By 2025, legal technology budgets would have increased three times, according to a report published by Gartner. Specialised legal tech vendors will build legal applications on top of business application platforms exploiting RPA, artificial intelligence, machine learning (ML), advanced analytics, process automation, and other emerging technologies.
2. Automation to simplify corporate transactions
Corporate transaction workload, including M&As, has soared in the past few years. Advances in natural language processing and machine learning technology have opened the door for handling these fluctuating workloads more efficiently and accurately. Legal departments have reported that almost 55% of work on corporate transactions is automatable.
Automation entices and scares many business owners. Those who choose to automate must make the brave leap of faith that puts their heart’s work in the hands of a robot—a decision that has taken many businesses to new heights while others crash and burn.
Only 12% of small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) are fully automated, with just 2% using intelligent technology like artificial intelligence or IoT, according to a report by the World Economic Forum.
There are many reasons for it, including financial constraints and the impact of unsuccessful automation. Below are often-seen issues SMBs face while deciding their automation strategy.
1. Automation is a strategic investment: Many firms view automation as a temporary solution, but its true potential is realised in the long term. For SMBs, making smart decisions on their automation plans can help realise a greater ROI within the first year.
2. Business-driven automation programmes: Automation is usually more successful when it is driven by business needs and process owners, as they know exactly what problem needs solving.
3. Reward innovation through an inside-out approach: Stakeholders within the business are well-positioned to propose automation ideas. Finding the appropriate processes along with relevant business cases strengthens the automation strategy within an organisation.
Many of these issues can be resolved using the right process assessment tool. Our non-intrusive, rapid automation assessment platform for small and medium businesses helps quickly build an automation pipeline, identify ROI-driven processes that are easy to automate, and generate a business case with automation costs and business value projects over 3 years.
Create your automation roadmap by simply letting your process owners answer a few simple questions. Try it today with LatentBridge experts and write an email to contact@latentbridge.com and ask your queries.