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The Robot and I:
How New Digital Technologies Are
Making Smart People and Businesses
Smarter by Automating Rote Work
Enterprise robots may not resemble the automatons from
your favorite sci-fi movie, but our latest study shows that when
applied to automating core business processes, they can extend
the creative problem-solving capabilities and productivity of
human beings and deliver superior business results.
2 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
Executive Summary
Robby the Robot. Optimus Prime. C-3PO. Cyberdyne Systems Model
101 (a.k.a. “The Terminator”). Cute, helpful or just plain terrifying, these
are what come to mind when the word “automation” is invoked: classic
interpretations of humanoid robots that replace people to do “things”
better (or sometimes worse) than we can.
Of course, the most common real-world robots are the ones that make
cars, unload ships, assemble any number of products or even vacuum
floors. But our latest research reveals that an entirely different scenario
is emerging, in which humans are working smarter with sophisticated
software to automate business tasks, which, in turn, is generating rich
process data that drives meaningful insights, value and outcomes for
businesses.
To understand what the future holds for intelligent automation, we
surveyed 537 North American and European organizations, ranging from
banks and insurers (property/casualty/life), to healthcare payers (see
methodology, page 22).
Our findings reveal significant new trends. The first centers around the
ability of intelligent automation to improve materially upon what people
can do, as well as unlock meaning from data using process analytics. In
some cases, organizations are automating work completely through
digitization by re-imagining and instrumenting a process from its inception
to harness the power of emerging digital technologies, such as social,
mobile, analytics and cloud (or the SMAC StackTM
). Our research also
shows that through these technologies, humans are attaining new levels
of process efficiency, such as improved operational cost, speed, accuracy
and throughput volume. By using increasingly more astute technologies,
smart businesses are doing a much better job of tackling complex process
opportunities. In short, they are fast becoming force-multipliers to people
who are still essential to process work in banking, healthcare, life sciences
and insurance.
Three key data sets and findings substantiate this point of view:
•	 “Money:” Process automation is saving substantial amounts of it,
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 3
today. Automation is empowering businesses to work smarter, with fewer
people “doing the process;” nearly one-fifth of respondents achieved
greater than 15% cost savings through automation in the past year.
Executives also predict that the number of people directly tasked with
performing process delivery will contract significantly in the coming
years — and in some areas, this may be happening faster than we realized.
•	 “Meaning-making:” The data generated by automation will radically
improve process outcomes. Beyond cost savings, the yield of process
data generated by automation is perhaps a far more profound benefit.
Roughly 50% of respondents see automation (and 44% see analytics)
as significantly improving processes over the next three to five years —
compared with only 30% for onshore process delivery (and only 28% for
offshore/nearshore). Moreover, nearly half of the banks surveyed (45%)
have seen at least 10% revenue growth from analytics aligned with their
front office and customer-facing functions, a number that is anticipated
to rise to nearly three out of every four banks during the next three to
five years.
•	 “Money and meaning:” Digital value chains can reform processes that are
smart and data-rich. Sometimes, “doing analytics” or merely automating
an existing process falls short. Prompted by innovative competitors, a
full digital re-think for making money and meaning may be crucial to
transform core processes in the future of work. By using next-generation
SMAC-based technologies, companies are completely re-imagining
customer, supplier and partner interactions. By igniting the digital
information surrounding these entities — or Code HaloTM
— organizations
can realize business process insights in far greater fidelity than has ever
been possible before.1
At the same time, impregnability is essential, and
data security cannot be compromised: 52% of respondents told us that
data security “is, will be and shall remain” the biggest digitization issue
they confront now and in the future.
•	 “Monday morning:” Where to begin. The automation of knowledge
processes derived from digital strategies is no longer fiction. Data from
many progressive adopters reveals a set of practical actions that leaders
can take now to start generating value, quickly.
A New, Complementary Symbiosis
for Repetitive and Rote Process Work
Humans performing knowledge work today are complemented by technology in
increasingly high-value ways. As a result, we are entering a new era of human-
machine interface for repetitive and rote processes, in which software tools have
emerged as “the robots” for knowledge work. Because they are not taking over
physical work such as welding or painting, these automation tools aren’t immedi-
ately recognizable as “robots” — but the impact they’re driving is real.
Some have called this “robotic process automation.” While true, use of this semi-
technical term can convey the wrong impression. In spite of significant software
tool development, we still do not have Robby the Robot or “the Borg” running
around our call centers, medical management facilities or insurance
enrollment offices.
Nevertheless, technology luminaries from innovators such as
Tesla Motors and SpaceX worry about “summoning the demon” of
artificial intelligence, “our biggest existential threat.”2
Extraordinary
theoretical thinkers like Stephen Hawking warn that automation
and artificial intelligence could potentially be “the worst mistake
in history,”3
without additional evidence of their positive business and societal
impact. Consider the counterpoint from Google’s Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt:
“There’s lots of evidence that when computers show up, wages go up … get people
prepared for this new world, so they can maximize their income.” 4
The debate rages,
presenting huge societal and political issues that are outside the scope of this paper
but are poised for intensified debate for years to come.
But instead of worrying about “the Terminator,” consider a different metaphor
from the canon of classic sci-fi films. In the 1986 movie sequel Aliens, Ellen Ripley
(Sigourney Weaver’s character) commands and controls a robotic exosuit cargo
loader to triumph over her greatest challenge. Ripley harnesses the strength and
power of the loader’s hardware and software to dramatically augment her human
grit, creativity, determination, decision-making, adaptability and will to succeed.
In short, instead of “I, Robot,” think about a new plotline of people and machines
working in tandem, one that features “the Robot and I.”
Our new research spotlights a deeper understanding of “how far, how fast” develop-
ments in process automation, analytics and other operational models will play out.
While we have miles to travel, our findings reveal that robots don’t dominate the
process automation space, but rather work in tandem to help make smart humans
smarter and businesses more agile.
Software tools have
emerged as “the robots”
for knowledge work.
In our survey, we probed leaders’ mindsets regarding process change enabled by next-generation
process automation, by asking a simple question: “Imagine a world of unlimited possibilities. If you could
create totally new business processes ‘from scratch,’ briefly describe the approach you would take.” The
responses — which appear throughout this paper — help shed context and insight on what’s on the minds
of enterprise leaders on the cusp of this shift.
4 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
“In Their Own Words
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 5
Show Me the Money: Process Automation Is Saving
Substantial Amounts of It, Today
Saving money — and driving greater impact from process optimization — has
been a managerial mantra governing automation technologies since the dawn
of computing. Organizations want new and innovative ways of achieving and
maximizing efficiency from people and processes. For years, the business process
services industry has been massively focused on lean principles (or process elimi-
nation by another name). What levers remain to be pulled? Now that “the robots
have arrived,” intelligent automation is the next wave of efficiency gain in business
processes. And, as shown in Figure 1, the top drivers for automation go beyond cost
savings, to reduced error rates, better management of repeatable tasks and better
standardization of process workflow.
SMART HANDS AND SMART ROBOTS: “I envision the seamless integration of
automated processes, manual processes, instructions and learning materials
required to execute manual processes, audit trails, checklists, etc., all combined
in a single tool or view.” — IT Manager, Information/Media/Entertainment, Nordic
region
All Things Being Equal, Robots and Humans Aren’t
Standardization leads to scale. And while both humans and robots can drive
standard process delivery at scale, an open question is which can do it better?
Something has to give: Process standardization is the leading value ascribed by
respondents to their people-based resources today (see Figure 9, page 14). But
many organizations are also starting to use robots as a powerful lever for process
standardization too, while leveraging skilled human workers for their unique talents
(e.g., five years ago, would a Twitter-wrangler have been someone’s job description
for customer management processes?). In other words, when robots can do the
rote tasks less expensively, leaders need to take stock and shift people to more
complex processes that allow them to apply innate human talents and creativity in
ways that robots just can’t do.
21%
19%
14%
11%
21%
Reduce
error rates
Improve standardization
of process workflow
Better manage
repeatable tasks
Reduce reliance
on multiple systems/
screens to complete
the process
Create a frictionless,
“straight-through” process
What’s a Human to Do? Use Robots to Get Smarter
What are the current or potential impacts of the following process automation
attributes on your business?
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: 537
Figure 1
To Find the Money, Go with the (Work)Flow
To establish a meaningful baseline, we asked leaders where their processes were
most automated today (see Figure 2).
For this purpose, we defined “automation” as including any functional activity that
was previously performed manually and is now handled via technology platforms
or process automation tools like robotic process automation (RPA) platforms. Thus,
what a lot of leaders currently regard as “automation” is likely driven by core
IT investments (i.e., the implementation of specialized enterprise apps such as
ERP, CRM or BPM). All of these can drive automation — but not to the level that
robotic process automation can by mimicking human actions at the software pre-
sentation layer or user interface, and interacting with multiple applications, just as
a human would.
BPM TO STREAMLINE WORKFLOW: “Link every process to one software and
follow one workflow. Right now, we have many programs and processes running
in parallel.”— SM Operations Director, Retail & Hospitality, Benelux region
Persistent and Pervasive Automation — Today, Tomorrow and in the Future
Percent of process automation as gauged by workflow, where automation is defined as “any area that was done manually and
is now done via technology platforms, process automation tools and even macros to support the process.”
Policy service &
contract administration
HEALTHCARE PAYERS
PC&L INSURANCE
Fraud & abuse
services
Medical management
Overpayment
recovery services
Claims coding &
processing
Member/provider
customer support
Enrollment &
billing services
Risk, fraud
& compliance
New business, underwriting
& customer support
Claims administration
New product &
service development
Customer
management & sales
Supply chain
Human resources
Middle-office or
customer facing
Front-office or
customer facing
Back-office or
support functions
Finance & accounting
0%
Now In 1-2 years In 3-5 years
0%
10 20 30 40 50 60 10 20 30 40 50 60
BANKS
HORIZONTAL
PROCESSES
6 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: Healthcare payers: 102; PC&L Insurers: 115; Banks: 153
Figure 2
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 7
Against these parameters, our findings are surprising on two levels:
1.	 There is a large amount of workflow that respondents think is currently
“automated” (25% to 40% of workflow, in most cases).
2.	Against that backdrop, the expected increases in business process automation
over the next five years may seem insignificant (10% to 20%, in most cases),
pointing to a lack of understanding by business leaders and decision-makers as
to what’s at stake.
For example: Think about the “long tail” of process steps that haven’t been
automated by core systems. These are usually process workarounds that entail
manual inputs to get systems “ready to get ready” for processing knowledge work
(i.e., claims processing, audit preparation, logging customer contacts, verifications,
etc.). As a percent of overall workflow, these steps may be more generalized in
terms of specialization, follow rote procedures, involve regulatory requirements or
require rapid response. With further process automation, those incremental steps
are likely to be handled by robots, and the collective, cumulative impact of the “long
tail” — in terms of cost — is likely to be significant.
AUTOMATION FOR THE “LONG TAIL:” “The more we move toward mobile work,
the more time we’ll have. We want to see the automation of all the very time-
consuming, ‘little,’ tiresome things.” — Finance & Compliance Manager, Technology
Products & Services, UK/Ireland region
In aggregate, nearly one-fifth of respondents have achieved greater than 15% cost
savings through automation in the past year (see Figure 3, next page). Moreover,
66% of all respondents expect at least 10% cost savings (again, using 2013 as a
baseline) from automation in the long-term future. As a result, buyers and business
process services providers will need to start anticipating and incorporating these
levels of projected savings into their future plans and commercial models.
Let’s look at it by industry: While 26% of banking respondents have enjoyed
15%-plus cost savings from automation in their front office and customer-facing
functions compared with one year ago, 55% expect those same levels of savings
(15% or more savings) within three to five years. It’s a similar story in just about
every vertical and horizontal process domain. That’s good for all participants —
especially when success is measured based on the outcome of cost savings, and
less on the operational cost tied to the number of people “doing the process.”
Quick Take
Standards — Hold Them High and Automated
When workflows become standardized, that process is very likely a good candidate
for automation. For example, how many “right ways” are there to run a payroll
or to adjudicate a straightforward insurance claim? Consider horizontal functions
like accounts payable (through e-invoicing) and claims management (through
auto-adjudication) as great examples that exist today. Tomorrow, you’ll see more
automation (and just as likely, digital transformation) among industry processes
like revenue cycle management in healthcare, and clinical data management in
life sciences.
8 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
The Impact on People Performing Non-
Differentiating, Rote Tasks Is Potentially Massive
The executives we surveyed also predict that as a result of process automation, the
number of people directly tasked with performing process delivery will contract
significantly in the coming years — and in some areas, it may be happening faster
than we realized.
•	 Our data shows that the more “industrialized” general and administrative
(G&A) functions are being impacted the most. As Figure 4 (page 10) shows,
at least one in five companies surveyed have already seen a 25% reduction in
employees across supply chain, HR and F&A functions.
•	 In the short term, healthcare payers are vertical-industry trailblazers.
They’re pushing frontiers of cost reduction through automation, especially when
it comes to middle-office functions such as claims coding and processing, in
which over one-quarter of payer respondents have seen at least 15% cost sav-
ings year-over-year (see Figure 3).
Human resources
Finance & accounting
Customer management & sales
Supply chain
New product/service development
Front-office and customer-facing functions
Middle-office or operational functions
Back-office or support functions
New business, underwriting & customer service
Policy service and contract administration
Claims administration
Risk, fraud & compliance
Enrollment & billing services
Claims coding & processing
Overpayment recovery services
Fraud & abuse services
Medical management
Member/provider customer support
EXPECTED IN
1-2 YEARS
3-5
YEARS
HORIZONTAL
PROCESSES
BANKS
INSURANCE
HEALTHCARE
PAYER
13%
15%
14%
17%
15%
26%
23%
19%
12%
18%
21%
21%
20%
28%
11%
11%
20%
17%
20%
26%
22%
25%
24%
39%
40%
34%
40%
36%
55%
40%
43%
39%
46%
53%
49%
35%
35%
30%
25%
22%
35%
41%
22%
28%
29%
30%
37%
34%
50%
41%
39%
39%
40%
47%
FROM ONE
YEAR AGO
Robots Make a Money-Saving Assembly Line
Percent of decision-makers realizing at least 15% cost savings across front-office, middle-office
and back-office functions as a result of automation.
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: Healthcare payers: 102; PC&L Insurers: 115; Banks: 153
Figure 3
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 9
•	 Among industry verticals, banks will see the highest levels of staff reduc-
tion. As Figure 5 (see page 11) illustrates, banks are more inclined than other
industries to automate their processes, often due to their need to better focus
on customers. Banks emerged from the sub-prime crisis with the realization that
standardized systems (technology), better risk underwriting (analytics) and dif-
ferentiating customer service (SMAC platforms) can help drive stronger growth
and expansion. We see these beliefs being reflected in the numbers around auto-
mation as an on-ramp to these new approaches to process efficiency.
To stay ahead of the curve, people performing routine business functions (and
those tasked with managing them) will need to rethink how work is conducted,
and how others in their organization will harness process automation for better
outcomes.
“HELLO COMPUTER” — VOICE-ACTIVATED DATA RETRIEVAL: “(I envision being
able to) search for files simply by a code name spoken into a microphone that’s
attached to a laptop. No need to search in documented folders.” — Operations
Manager, Retail & Hospitality, North American region
As shown in Figures 4 and 5 (on pages 10 and 11), this is happening with a similar
degree of impact in horizontal and industry-specific process areas. Depending
on the environment, the degree of staff reduction can be highly dynamic; the
speed with which automated process robots perform is limited only by underlying
systems. For continuous processes (say 24x7 functions such as customer service
and support), automation provides almost unlimited availability, performing the
same tasks over and over, with near-zero defects and complete auditability.
Quick Take
Making the “Swivel-chair Process”
Obsolete
Even though many processes are technology-rich, they’re still
people-intensive and require staff to toggle between multiple
systems and screens to achieve “last-mile” integration of data
checking, inputting, searching or collating to drive an outcome.
This type of “swivel-chair” work is eliminated as manual process
steps are diminished, leading to straight-through process com-
pression. And with scalability built into the code and architec-
ture of these processes, the need for people-based process
delivery is further reduced with rule- and value-based logic of
machine-learning and artificial intelligence — or in some cases,
subjective judgment — that is, smart people working in tandem
with intelligent automation.
10 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
As a result, people need to stay ahead of the curve, not by being “faster or cheaper”
but by developing, honing and capitalizing on the capabilities that are uniquely
human and cannot be replicated today by automated software. Such activities
include collaboration and teamwork with a highly diverse workforce (and yes, that
includes robots), creativity, curiosity, constructive problem-solving, inventiveness,
empathy and physical touch (say, in medical management). And of course, humans
must focus on jobs that require a high degree of intelligence — at least more than
what can be applied today by any robot.5
Show Me the Meaning: The Data Generated
from Automation Will Radically Improve Process
Outcomes
“Tools help make delivery better” may sound simple, but it hides a significant trap:
An automation-for-automation’s-sake strategy fails to focus on the real prize — an
explosion of rich process-level data. That’s where analytics comes in.
The importance of analytics for processing insight and meaning-making is immense.
The reality is that today’s digital age — compared with last century’s industrial
age — presents an unprecedented ability to make business meaning from massive
amounts of data. If you aren’t “doing” big data, the story goes, you’re in trouble, and
terrible things will happen.6
Supply Chain
27%
30%
Human Resources Finance &
Accounting
Customer
Management &
Sales
New Product/
Service
Development
FROM ONE
YEAR AGO 3-5 YEARS 23%
28%
FROM ONE
YEAR AGO 3-5 YEARS
22%
24%
FROM ONE
YEAR AGO 3-5 YEARS 17%
17%
FROM ONE
YEAR AGO 3-5 YEARS
16%
27%
FROM ONE
YEAR AGO 3-5 YEARS
Automation’s Force-Multiplier to Work Smarter,
with Fewer People ‘Doing the Process’
Percent of decision-makers realizing or anticipating greater than 25% FTE reduction as a result
of automation in their horizontal processes.
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: 537
Figure 4
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 11
The list of game-changing and differentiating examples of process
analytics is immense, especially when RPA tools using artificial
intelligence and machine learning to drive time-sensitive outcomes
are applied. Examples include real-time dynamic fleet optimization
for destination and delivery capacity for logistics; millions of miles
of analysis of “hard brakes” for dynamic auto policy pricing; or
collation of huge volumes of clinical data for optimized pharma-
ceutical trials. But leaders we interviewed are currently limiting
the use of analytics — for the most part — to process optimiza-
tion alone (see Figure 6, page 12). At the same time, they are
succeeding with using analytics in customer-facing processes to
boost revenues. That’s great news for their customers, and is a
trend we see continuing across most customer-facing work.7
An automation-for-automation’s-sake strategy fails to
focus on the real prize — an explosion of rich process-level
data. That’s where analytics comes in.
The Industry Outlook for
People and Automation
Percent of decision-makers anticipating
greater than 25% FTE reduction as
a result of automation in their industry-
specific processes.
Banking &
Financial Services
19%
28%
NOW 3-5 YEARS
Healthcare
Payers
19%
16%
NOW 3-5 YEARS
Insurance
15%
23%
NOW 3-5 YEARS
•	 Cost savings plus new revenue streams. Well over half (55%)
of respondents say that reducing costs is the key outcome of
their analytics efforts today — and importantly, another 47% say
understanding customer requirements is a core strategic goal.
In essence, buyers are using insights to improve operations,
while also opening new channels to revenue by understand-
ing customers better — directly as a result of their business
analytics activities.
•	 Keeping process mechanics in plain sight — but what about
doing things differently? Optimizing processes and driving
deeper business insights dominates current analytics thinking.
For a lot of companies, analytics may present unanticipated
insights that allow them to change and run their businesses
differently — especially in the face of disruptive moves brought
by digital innovation. Over 40% of survey respondents say
they value better process mechanics — such as throughput,
quality and streamlining of processes — more highly than
outcomes such as prioritizing business needs, better market
penetration and segmentation or, last on the list, creating new
products/services.
IT’S NOT JUST ABOUT CUTTING COSTS: “We don’t want to cut
costs, but increase sales. We want to optimize workflows and
align business processes to speed up sales cycles and customer
satisfaction. Big data analytics are needed to pinpoint those
trends.” — IT Manager, Information/Media/Entertainment, Benelux
region
Generating substantial revenue growth among customers is also a
major outcome. As illustrated in Figure 7 (page 13), among vertical
industries, nearly half of banks (45%) have seen at least 10%
revenue growth from analytics aligned with their front-office and
customer-facing functions, a figure that is anticipated to rise to
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: Healthcare payers: 102; PC&L Insurers: 115; Banks: 153
Figure 5
nearly three out of every four banks in three to five years (a collective 73%). It’s
a similar story among insurance companies and healthcare payers as well, where
customer processes are already analytics-driven and revenue growth is already
flowing today, and is anticipated to continue in the future.
DIGITAL BANKING + BIG DATA: “(I envision) digital banking, with customer-driven
processes, with built-in relationship management, as well as big data to identify
customer needs in an attractive and user-friendly 24x7 solution.” — IT Manager,
Banking & Financial Services, Nordic region
Using Intelligent
Automation and
Insights to Make Smart
People Smarter
The benefits are clear for using
automation to release new
volumes of data that is ripe for
analytics. But today, calibration
of service delivery models — from
onshore and offshore sourcing, big data analytics and automation — is
essentially a toss-up. Respondents clearly envision a future generation of
processes that will be automated and intelligent. As shown in Figure 8 (next
page), exactly half of respondents see automation — and 44% see analytics —
as delivering a positive impact to processes in three to five years. Compare that
with only 30% for onshore process delivery. In other words, organizations that can
master smart robots tethered to smart data
will outpace rivals who don’t (or can’t).
DATA: WHAT I WANT, WHEN I WANT IT: “First
of all, increase the speed and accuracy of all
technologies used. Next I would like to see a
more structured output and constant access
to real-time data.” — Operations Manager,
Retail & Hospitality, Benelux region
Leaders concur that robots are here today, and
more are coming. Our research unequivocally
shows that smart robots automate processes
to save money but that they also improve
accuracyandreliability.Yes,robotsdothesame
tasks over and over, with zero variance and
significantly fewer errors. But this is not just
a story about the rise of the smart machines.
Robots still need oversight to monitor, orches-
trate, coordinate and remediate problems if
something goes wrong. While much focus is
placed on making smart people smarter (see
Figure 9, page 14), the leading benefit of peo-
ple-powered processes today is to standard-
ize delivery (primary benefit, cited by 26% of
respondents), followed by improved domain
Process Analytics: Show Me the Meaning (Making)
Percent of
decision-makers
citing the current
use of analytics
for the following
outcomes
Reducing
costs
55%
47%
43%
42%
39%
37%
36%
28%
23%
Understanding
customer
requirements
Better process
throughput
& quality
Streamlining
processes
Prioritizing
business needs
Better market penetration
& segmentation
Enhancing
process accuracy
Optimizing
product portfolio
Creating new
products/services
Organizations that can master
smart robots tethered to smart
data will outpace rivals who
don’t (or can’t).
12 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
Source: Cognizant Center
for the Future of Work
Base: 537
Figure 6
expertise and skills of subject matter experts,
including language capabilities (second most
popular response, at 20%).
But automation has its limits — and there are
some things that robots just can’t do (medical
management, underwriting, case reviews, speak
or comprehend colloquial slang, etc.). While
automation is currently perceived as the “hot”
delivery model, hot things still need a trivet
so the proverbial table doesn’t get burned.
That’s where a blended model of automation
working in tandem with people can provide
complementary outcomes. And there is no
doubt that the domain skills of many subject
matter experts will continue to exist outside
the realm of what we can expect from robots,
at least in the short term.
In order to really capitalize on the interplay
of people and automation, organizations
must master the resulting data. And that data
is the product of automation and digitiza-
tion. By automating systems to better sense,
predict and interpret the data they produce,
employees can work heads up, not down, with
intelligence from digital processes supporting
Member/provider
customer support
Claims coding
& processing
INSURANCE
New business,
underwriting &
customer service
BANKS
Front office &
customer-facing
functions
42%
15%
8%
13%
13%
13%
17%
38%
36%
45%
25%
8%
HEALTHCARE PAYERS
FROM ONE
YEAR AGO
EXPECTED
IN 1-2 YEARS
3-5 YEARS
Ramping up Analytics … To Ramp up Revenue
Percent of respondents realizing/anticipating at least 10% of
revenue growth achieved as a result of data analytics within the
following selected industry-specific processes.
Fifty percent of respondents see automation
(and 44% see analytics) as delivering a positive
impact to processes in three to five years.
Now 3 to 5
years
20%
24%
16%
27%
Process
automation
Figure 1
50%
Process
automationProcess
analytics/
big data
44%
Process
analytics/
big data
Onshore
process
delivery
30%
Onshore
process
delivery
Off-/near-
shore
process
delivery
28%
Off-/near-
shore
process
delivery
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 13
Global Delivery, Analytics, Automation Working in Tandem – Today and Tomorrow
Percent of respondents rating the following four service delivery models as “significant” or “profound/transformational”
(4 or 5, on a scale of 1-5) in terms of their overall ability to positively impact business processes.
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: Healthcare payers: 102; PC&L Insurers: 115; Banks: 153
Figure 7
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: 537
Figure 8
their own smart brains. By making processes digital from the outset, businesses
can capture information about the movements of people, goods, information and
services through space and time, shrinking customer decision times. Consider the
Internet of Things, where sensors — sure to include nanotechnologies coupled with
artificial intelligence — are beginning to totally digitize and automate processes in
a straight-through data flow. Digitizing one or several pieces of an industry process
value chain can impact the health of the whole business. Consider the steps you
need to take now by picking your process pressure points for success. And then
calibrate where, how and when smart technologies like automation can complement
the workforce, and make smart people smarter.
26%
Improved process
standardization
20%
Improved domain
expertise and skills of
SMEs, including
language capabilities
18%
Better management
of distributed activities
done in parallel
16%
Improved management
of process volume19%
Better management
of asynchronous,
time-consuming tasks
Quick Take
To Err Is Human — at What Cost to Process?
Ask yourself a question: Are the people delivering my processes today
adding value or injecting risk? For example, in insurance, the cost of
miscoding on claims adds up to millions per year, not to mention the
decline in client satisfaction resulting from multiple claims. It doesn’t
have to be that difficult; with automation applied, insurers can achieve
80% first-pass accuracy through auto-adjudication.
Power to the People: The Value of Onshore-Nearshore-Offshore Human
Staffing (vs. Automation)
14 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: 537
Figure 9
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 15
Show Me the Money and the Meaning:
Digital Value Chains Can Reform Processes that
Are Smart, Data-Rich — and Secure
It’s no surprise that analytics conducted at the process level can deliver a quantifi-
able return on investment today, a result that is expected to accelerate over time.
But there may be a gnawing concern that applying a robot as a dance partner to
an “as-is” process, for instance, still leaves organizations woefully short of the truly
differentiated ballet of today’s high-flying, competitive outliers that have disrupted
entire industries through process digitization.8
SOCIAL MEDIA FOR PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT: “The potential of social media
is immense. [It will have a] revolutionizing impact on processes like product and
technology development, and communicating with customers.” — SM & IT Director,
Banking & Financial Services, Germany
Process digitization can also radically accelerate and transform data analytics —
and business models. As shown in Figure 10 (above), nearly one-third of respon-
dents cite improved quality/consistency/believability in the data they’re getting
from digital process initiatives, and 27% report easier integration across processes.
Applying a robot as a dance partner to an “as-is” process
still leaves organizations woefully short of the truly
differentiated ballet of today’s high-flying, competitive
outliers that have disrupted entire industries through
process digitization.
Digitize to Analyze: The Impact of Digital Processes
on Meaning-Making
Percent of respondents citing the impact of digital process technologies on running
better analytics across processes (multiple responses allowed).
32%
27%
21%
20%
Easier data integration across process
Improve volume of data yield from process
Improved quality/consistency/“believability” of data
Better impact/value/insight of combined analytics output
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: 537
Figure 10
16 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
It’s All About the Data: Challenges Associated
with Efforts to Digitize
Percent of respondents citing the following issues as being the biggest
challenges associated with their efforts to digitize processes (multiple
responses allowed).
48
%
36
%
41
%
36
%
DATA
ACCESS
ADEQUATE INTERNAL
SKILL SETS
TO ANALYZE DATA
DATA
QUALITY
INABILITY TO
ATTAIN STRAIGHT-
THROUGH
PROCESSING
INADEQUATE
INTERNAL SKILL
TO AUTOMATE
PROCESSES
52
%
46
%
DATA
SECURITY
What’s also changing is the impact of digital processes on value chains and operating
models. Each industry and its processes — whether claims management in insurance,
or reconciliation or mortgage processing in banks — is swiftly adopting new process
models. Harnessing the power of digital smart machines and AI, relationships that
were traditionally transactional are now “interactional;” that is, rather than being
“once-and-done,” they involve multiple interactions, and the more you can learn
about a customer, supplier, partner — or even employee — the more meaningful each
subsequent transaction can become.
By the same token, value is more aligned with process data than with the process
itself. As operational models focus more on services or outputs, they enable orga-
nizations to build new, truly flexible and adaptable process models that can be
quickly piloted and refined — or allowed to “fail fast.” As a result, digital processes
are being re-formed in new, cost-effective and powerful ways that unlock meaning
through analytics.9
The power of autonomous machine learning and artificial intel-
ligence is amplified in scenarios such as these, especially when data is created at
massive scale. When an intelligent robot finds an anomalous or novel situation, it
can flag it and ask, “So now what?” This initiates a verification process that can
be fine-tuned using machine learning, covering everything from name-matching,
to graph analysis and workflow decisions. The larger the sample size of data, the
better the decision-making will be.
Making the World of Digital Data Safe for Smart
Process Adoption: The Security Imperative
Digital technologies and digital processes can only be effective if the data source
is credible and usable. However, it’s not as simple as it sounds. When asked about
the biggest challenges associated with efforts
to digitize processes, executives said that data
security “is, will be and shall remain” the biggest
issue they confront, now and in the future
(see Figure 11). Looking at these and other top
challenges demonstrates that — despite current
excitement for future process innovations —
leaders are proceeding with “eyes wide open”
to the potential risks:
•	 Data security tops all challenges related to
digital processes. Fifty-two percent of respon-
dents cite data security as the chief issue today.
As digital processes proliferate, and as leaders
see the value they create, an entirely new eco-
system of value-added services will develop to
ensure the security, risk, privacy and compli-
ance of the value chain of information these
processes generate.
•	 The issue isn’t likely to go away. Forty-five
percent of respondents continue to foresee data
security as the defining digital process chal-
lenge, even three to five years out.
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: 537
Figure 11
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 17
Creating a Progressive
Pole Position in an Unevenly Distributed Race
Organizations need to do much more than articulate intent to modernize their
processes. We see distinct characteristics for companies that have implemented
some form of automation, and use analytics to create newer products and penetrate
new markets. However, our study also shows that not everyone is completely
onboard. There is general agreement on the benefits of intelligent automation and
digitization, but organizations are at various stages of adoption and implementa-
tion of digital strategies.
Among our respondent base of 537 leaders, we further segmented the leaders —
a group we call “Process Progressives” — from the rest of the pack (see Figure
12). “Fence-Sitters” are primarily characterized by having dipped their toes into
some automation of front-, middle- and back-office functions (less than 10%
cite automation of core processes) and, as such, are far behind the Progressives.
“Laggards” are far behind the Progressives in their current automation practices
and don’t tend to use analytics for process optimization and other benefits.
Progressives are characterized by significant use of automation for functions
outside of core back-office functions; they are also aggressive users of
process analytics for innovation (creating and optimizing new products and
services). They also — wisely — attach a premium to data security and are
more acutely aware of the technical barriers and skill deficits that could
potentially slow down or inhibit the adoption of digitization. Progressives consti-
tuted about one-third of respondents.
•	 Progressives are generously rewarded for their process automation with
cost savings. About half (49%) cite a 10% or higher reduction in process costs
due to automation.
Progressives
Laggards
Fence Sitters
31%
30%
40%
30%
38%
52%
39%
31%
8%
BANKING INSURANCE HC PAYERS
Three Distinct Types of Companies on Various
Stages of the Digital Journey
Percent of respondents — by industry – that fall into the segments.
Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work
Base: 537
Figure 12
18 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
•	 Progressives are further along the journey of automation than other seg-
ments. At least half have automated some part of their back-office processes,
such as HR, finance, CRM and supply chain.
Progressive adopters have also taken automation to some of their middle-
office and customer-facing functions (such as risk, fraud and compliance). Since
Progressives draw from all verticals equally, this broader adoption is evidence
of organizational attitude and drive toward digitization, rather than simply a
reflection of industry dynamics.
Analytics among Progressives Spurs Innovation Leading
to Revenue Growth
Our study shows that Progressives are about three times more likely to employ
analytics to feed into their innovation process than the other two market segments.
•	 A third of Progressives cite revenue growth of at least 10% from process
analytics today. Tomorrow, 50% expect revenue benefits of more than 10% as a
result of analytics, and that number rises further to 61% in the long-term (three
to five years).
•	 Progressives have a keen awareness of how to leverage process analytics for
top- and bottom-line benefits. This ranges from identifying new market oppor-
tunities and better serving customer needs (revenue generation), to optimizing
various internal processes (cost optimization).
All business process leaders need to address the fast-arriving enabling technologies,
techniques and tools that will allow them to digitize their processes as a new basis
for competition and “managing on meaning.” The change is already happening:
Many progressive adopters are already well ahead of their peers by embracing ways
to begin the journey to new levels of process efficiency, driving different paths to
revenue growth, and applying new possibilities for operational models and their
process-level industry value chains.
Calibrating a sourcing strategy that carefully balances process automation and dig-
itally-fueled analytics is one of the most important trends in business services, and
leaders need to take steps now to win in the coming era of change.
To accelerate your journey to the future of process automation, don’t wait. Start
today, by imagining how the future of work will look tomorrow when digital machines,
information and processes help humans do their jobs better, faster and with
greater impact.
Calibrating a sourcing strategy that carefully balances process
automation and digitally-fueled analytics is one of the most
important trends in business services, and leaders need to take
steps now to win in the coming era of change.
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 19
Monday Morning: Where Can I Begin? Starting
Points to Assess Process Readiness for Change
Inertia is not an option, and for almost every business, it won’t be enough to simply
flip a light-switch and drive process change overnight. Organizations will need to
accept and embrace different process approaches for better outcomes to deliver
higher impact. (Hint: it’s not about the number of “people doing the process.”)
Among the key considerations:
•	 With automation, make sure you’re keeping business outcomes as the “prime
directive” to drive, guide, scale and test for success. Look for transaction-based
or outcome-based pricing models.10
In other words, the days are over for simply
“throwing more bodies at the task” to get it done. With powerful new technologies
of automation, the capabilities of fewer people are magnified by robots.
•	 Extract data (and distill meaning-making) to refine the fuel that drives pro-
cess excellence. Leaders will prioritize data that drives down costs, improves un-
derstanding of customers, boosts speed and quality, and streamlines processes.
Revenue potential starts — not surprisingly — with customers. Use those process-
es to get started — and apply new technologies of automation and digitization to
know customers, as well as focus on the right sets of data that help drive that
knowledge.
These are the “big” considerations, and you’ll not
only want to rate them on Monday morning, but
also continuously revisit them as lodestars for
your organization’s process journey in the years
ahead. But there are approaches, especially around
readiness for process automation, in which months
of readiness assessment can be compressed into
as little as a week, and piloting and testing
compressed into two to four weeks of development
to showcase results.
Some simple questions to ask prior to a process
readiness assessment include: “How do I get rid
of paper-based process inputs, such as invoices
or claims, and get my process truly ‘digital’ from the outset?” “Do the people
delivering my processes today add value or inject risk?” “What are we learning
about our business or industry value chain as data is analyzed, and does it help
smart people to make better judgments?”
Steps to Take Now on the Journey to the Future of Process
It’s not a radical fantasy to view automation and digitization as disruptors of the
“old way of doing things.” Intelligent automation is here, today. But the emphasis
on sheer people power is different and changing fast. Remember “the Robot and
I” — this is about “Ripley and the Loader:” smart people, working powerfully with
intelligent automation to impact processes that can efficiently and effectively move
the needle on business strategy.
How will you respond? Scan your process topography and target processes (or
fragments or pieces of sub-processes, say, auto-adjudication in claims management)
that might lend themselves to being low-hanging fruit for automation. Consider the
following as a simple, yet effective checklist to begin the assessment:
The days are over for simply
“throwing more bodies at the task”
to get it done. With powerful new
technologies of automation, the
capabilities of fewer people are
magnified by robots.
20 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
•	 Perform an automation readiness assessment. Map processes to a level of de-
tail that includes inputs, processes and outputs. Scan the market for tested and
ready-to-implement technologies that have established tangible proof of success.
Apply minimally invasive automation technologies for efficiency gain today, but
keep your eyes on the prize for where transformation for differentiation makes
the most sense tomorrow.
•	 Analyze your company at the process level. Review in detail your processes as
they exist today (new product/service development, sales and customer relation-
ship management, operations, etc.). Infuse a digital process plan by re-imagining
moments of customer engagement or constituent journeys. Target tangible pro-
cess metrics: cost-per-claim, clinical trial yield, healthcare unit cost, fraud preven-
tion rates, etc.
•	 Help humans evolve toward the work of tomorrow. Start by giving employ-
ees access to digital processes and machines that help them do their jobs better,
smarter and with more meaningful impact to the business. It’s not about the
number of people tied to “doing the process;” it’s about outcomes and making
smart people even smarter.
•	 Create, educate and inculcate “the vision.” Move from recognizing that some-
thing “needs to happen” to “making something happen.” Business processes —
automated, digital or otherwise — are useless if they don’t support a business
strategy. That means helping smart people make smarter decisions in support
of differentiating activities. Get true alignment and buy-in to design, develop
and deliver — and move fast to get “runs on the board” to maintain and sustain
interest.
•	 Assign “tiger/SWAT teams,” including a mini-CIO (plus experience/design).
Most IT professionals are hard-pressed to fulfill the demands of current delivery,
but there are likely many extremely valuable (and digitally-savvy) resources that
would jump at the chance to become automation experts or join a digital process
tiger team. Physically sit and co-locate these digital process change agents into
the BUs.
>> Keep them thinking about the new process anatomy, data and the “art of the
possible,” including participatory design/research principles.
>> Have them re-code moments of engagement (internal and customer-facing),
using new technologies of intelligent automation.
•	 Execute specific process projects — to learn fast, or “fail fast.” Be specific —
don’t place resources and “hope for the best.” IT resources landing in a business
unit without work assignments are often quickly marginalized and abandoned. Get
creative and get moving — but within the “swim lanes” of the business or process
strategy. Identify, develop and implement solutions for process automation or
digital business transformation — fast — to successfully outrun the competition.
Infuse a digital process plan by re-imagining moments of
customer engagement or constituent journeys. Target
tangible process metrics: cost-per-claim, clinical trial yield,
healthcare unit cost, fraud prevention rates, etc.
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 21
•	 Make “meaning-making” mean something powerful — fueled by process data.
The imperatives to “do analytics” or “use big data” are just too broad to be mean-
ingful. Instead, focus on a specific business process. Whether it’s your under-
writing process, clinical drug trials, wealth management service, supply chain or
customer relationship management process, focus on work that shapes at least
10% of your costs or revenues. To seize competitive advantage, look at the data
that is — and could be — exchanged and used for value.
Looking Forward: Racing Together —
and Thriving — with the Robots
Businesses need a fresh approach to their organization models and processes —
and they need to digitize to analyze. Automation is a crucial new delivery model to
make that happen. This study reveals new market insights that chart the progress
in the journey so far, where process change is most likely to occur next in specific
industries and, importantly, what you should do about it.
Robotic process automation with sophisticated technologies is here to stay, and
the “Robot and I” model — vs. “I, Robot” — is crucial to understanding what the
future holds. The human spark is, and will remain, essential to how knowledge work
is orchestrated and managed. What’s different is that technologies can now create
more effective knowledge workers while simultaneously generating and capturing
data that can improve processes and eliminate wasteful steps.
Staying put is not an option; automation drives further efficiency gains by flattening,
streamlining and straightening process workflows. The resulting data — ripe for
analytics — becomes a force-multiplier of differentiation and process-level meaning
tied to business strategy and successful outcomes.
Our research opens the aperture on the possibilities. Some of them are intriguing,
some are mind-bending, but all will usher in profound change. This is one of the
most important trends in business services, and organizations need these insights
to help them win in the era of automation and digital processes. And like a good
science fiction movie, whether you like it or not, it’s coming soon — to a process
near you.
The human spark is, and will remain, essential to
how knowledge work is orchestrated and managed.
22 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
Appendix 1: The Methodology
Online panel-based research was conducted with decision-makers from banking and
financial services, insurance and healthcare companies across North America and
Europe. The sample also included companies from the pharmaceuticals, retail, hospitality
and technology industries. The research was spread over four weeks during Q3 2014, with
data gathered from 537 respondents, representing companies with $500 million to $3
billion in revenue. The research was conducted by an independent research agency (E2E
Research) on behalf of Cognizant.
Areas studied include:
•	 Current automation, analytics and digital plans for key processes (list of processes
provided in Appendix 2).
•	 Anticipated plans for those processes in 12 to 24 months.
•	 Anticipated plans for those processes in three to five years.
•	 Changes in process architecture and staffing levels due to automation.
•	 Relative impact of process automation, people-based staffing, analytics and strategic
outcomes from digital processes.
•	 Skills required for process digitization initiatives.
This study was conducted across a variety of sectors, functions and geographies.
Sectors
Functions
Banking & financial services
Insurance (life, P&C, retirement, auto, etc.)
Healthcare insurance (payers)
Pharmaceuticals
Retail & hospitality
Technology – products & services
Information, media & entertainment
28%
21%
19%
10%
17%
2%
3%
CXO
SVP, VP, Senior Director
Director, Senior Manager
Manager
CXO
SVP, VP, Senior Director
Director, Senior Manager
Manager
CXO
SVP, VP, Senior Director
Director, Senior Manager
Manager
CXO
SVP, VP, Senior Director
Director, Senior Manager
Manager
CXO
SVP, VP, Senior Director
Director, Senior Manager
Manager
General
Management
Operations
Marketing
Finance &
Compliance
IT
8% 6%
9%
13%
5%
3%
3%
3%
3%
3%
5%
12%
7%
2%
2%
1%
12%
CXO
SVP, VP, Senior Director
Director, Senior Manager
Manager
CXO
SVP, VP, Senior Director
Director, Senior Manager
Manager
CXO
SVP, VP, Senior Director
Director, Senior Manager
Manager
CXO
SVP, VP, Senior Director
Director, Senior Manager
Manager
CXO
SVP, VP, Senior Director
Director, Senior Manager
Manager
General
Management
Operations
Marketing
Finance &
Compliance
IT
8% 6%
9%
13%
5%
3%
3%
3%
3%
3%
5%
12%
7%
2%
2%
1%
12%
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 23
Healthcare Payer
•	 Enrollment & billing services
•	 Claims coding and processing
•	 Overpayment recovery services
•	 Fraud & abuse services
•	 Medical management
•	 Member/provider customer support
Insurance (Life, Property, Casualty)
•	 New business, underwriting and
customer service
•	 Policy service and contract adminis-
tration
•	 Claims administration
•	 Risk, fraud and compliance
North America
Europe
43%
57%
Appendix 2: Process Definitions
The processes studied are detailed below.
Horizontal Processes
•	 Human resources
•	 Finance and accounting
•	 Customer management and sales
•	 Supply chain
•	 New product/service development
Banks
•	 Front-office and customer-facing
functions
•	 Middle-office or operational functions
•	 Back-office or support functions
North America
Europe
43%
57%
Operating Regions
24 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015
Footnotes
1	
Understanding where, when and how that happens is a core principle of our book
Code Halos: How the Digital Lives of People, Things, and Organizations are Changing
the Rules of Business, by Malcolm Frank, Paul Roehrig and Ben Pring, published
by John Wiley & Sons, April 2014, www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-
1118862074.html.
2	
Macrina Cooper-White, “Elon Musk Says Artificial Intelligence Research May Be
‘Summoning the Demon,’” The Huffington Post, Oct. 27, 2014, www.huffingtonpost.
com/2014/10/27/elon-musk-artificial-intelligence_n_6053804.html.
3	
“Stephen Hawking: Transcendence Looks at the Implications of Artificial Intelligence,
but Are We Taking AI Seriously Enough,” The Independent, May 1, 2014, www.inde-
pendent.co.uk/news/science/stephen-hawking-transcendence-looks-at-the-implica-
tions-of-artificial-intelligence--but-are-we-taking-ai-seriously-enough-9313474.html.
4	
Issie Lapowsky, “Google’s Eric Schmidt: Don’t Fear the Artificially Intelligent Future,”
Wired, Dec. 9, 2014, www.wired.com/2014/12/eric-schmidt-ai/.
5	
Ben Pring, “How to Beat the Robots,” Cognizant’s Center for the Future of Work, Nov.
28, 2014, www.futureofwork.com/article/details/how-to-beat-the-robots.
6	
This is especially true when tied to “moments of magic” driven by Code Halos,
when business processes can seemingly read the mind of their customers (i.e., “if
you enjoyed product x, you’ll probably love product z”) and make their customers’
purchasing process easy, enjoyable, fun and seductive.
7	
Paul Roehrig and Ben Pring, “The Value of Signal and the Cost of Noise,”
Cognizant Center for the Future of Work, October 2013, www.cognizant.com/
InsightsWhitepapers/The-Value-of-Signal-and-the-Cost-of-Noise-The-New-
Economics-of-Meaning-Making.pdf.
8	
Malcolm Frank, Paul Roehrig, Ben Pring, “Code Rules: A Playbook for Managing at
the Crossroads,” Cognizant Center for the Future of Work, June 2013, www.cognizant.
com/Futureofwork/Documents/code-rules.pdf.
9	
These findings are in line with those published in The Center for the Future of Work’s
2013 study, “The Value of Signal (and the Cost of Noise): The New Economics of
Meaning Making,” June 2013, www.cognizant.com/InsightsWhitepapers/The-Value-
of-Signal-and-the-Cost-of-Noise-The-New-Economics-of-Meaning-Making.pdf. This
report — which examines the return on investment that data analytics generates —
found that organizations had generated $766 billion in total economic benefit from
their business analytics initiatives over the course of the last year. Much of that
activity was oriented toward understanding the code being generated by digital
processes.
10	
Outcome-based process models might include providing incentives like business-
benefit-based contracting or gain-sharing with a business process outsourcer, or
moving from a people-based model to volume-based transaction pricing.
	
Note: Code Halo™ and SMAC Stack™ are pending trademarks of Cognizant
Technology Solutions.
	
All company names, trade names, trademarks, trade dress, designs/logos, copyrights,
images and products referenced in this white paper are the property of their
respective owners. No company referenced in this white paper sponsored this white
paper or the contents thereof.
THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 25
About the Authors
Robert Hoyle Brown is an Associate Vice-President in Cognizant’s Center for the Future
of Work, and drives strategy and market outreach for the Business Process Services
Practice. He is also a regular contributor to futureofwork.com, “Signals from the Future
of Work.” Prior to joining Cognizant, he was Managing Vice-President of the Business and
Applications Services team at Gartner, and as a research analyst, he was a recognized
subject matter expert in BPO, cloud services/ BPaaS and HR services. He also held roles
at Hewlett-Packard and G2 Research, a boutique outsourcing research firm in Silicon
Valley. He holds a bachelor of arts degree from the University of California at Berkeley
and, prior to his graduation, attended the London School of Economics as a Hansard
Scholar. He can be reached at Robert.H.Brown@cognizant.com | LinkedIn: http://www.
linkedin.com/pub/robertbrown/1/855/a47.
Paul Roehrig, Ph.D., co-leads Cognizant’s Center for the Future of Work. Prior to joining
Cognizant, Paul was a Principal Analyst at Forrester Research, where he researched
and advised senior IT leadership on a broad range of topics, including sourcing strategy,
trends and best practices. Paul also held key positions in planning, negotiation and
successful global program implementation for customers from a variety of industries,
including financial services, technology, federal government and telecommunications
for Hewlett-Packard and Compaq Computer Corp. He holds a degree in journalism from
the University of Florida and graduate degrees from Syracuse University. Paul can be
reached at Paul.Roehrig@cognizant.com | Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/paul-
roehrig/0/785/20/.
Vineet Malhotra is the Senior Director of Marketing within Cognizant’s Business Process
Services Practice. In this role, he heads the global marketing function, driving go-to-
market strategy, market positioning and strategic solutions, and addressing customer
ecosystem challenges through thought leadership and research. He has more than
20 years of experience across various industries and geographies, while working with
global telecom and technology companies. Vineet can be reached at Vineet.Malhotra@
cognizant.com | LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/vineet-malhotra/0/a43/b19.
The Robot and I: How New Digital Technologies Are Making Smart People and Businesses Smarter by Automating Rote Work
The Robot and I: How New Digital Technologies Are Making Smart People and Businesses Smarter by Automating Rote Work
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Cognizant’s Center for the Future of Work provides original
research and analysis of work trends and dynamics, and col-
laborates with a wide range of business and technology think-
ers and academics about what the future of work will look like
as technology changes so many aspects of our working lives.
Learn more by visiting www.futureofwork.com.
About Cognizant
Cognizant (NASDAQ: CTSH) is a leading provider of information
technology, consulting, and business process outsourcing ser-
vices, dedicated to helping the world’s leading companies build
stronger businesses. Headquartered in Teaneck, New Jersey
(U.S.), Cognizant combines a passion for client satisfaction,
technology innovation, deep industry and business process
expertise, and a global, collaborative workforce that embod-
ies the future of work. With over 75 development and delivery
centers worldwide and approximately 199,700 employees as of
September 30, 2014, Cognizant is a member of the NASDAQ-100,
the S&P 500, the Forbes Global 2000, and the Fortune 500
and is ranked among the top performing and fastest growing
companies in the world. Visit us online at www.cognizant.com or
follow us on Twitter: Cognizant.

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The Robot and I: How New Digital Technologies Are Making Smart People and Businesses Smarter by Automating Rote Work

  • 1. The Robot and I: How New Digital Technologies Are Making Smart People and Businesses Smarter by Automating Rote Work Enterprise robots may not resemble the automatons from your favorite sci-fi movie, but our latest study shows that when applied to automating core business processes, they can extend the creative problem-solving capabilities and productivity of human beings and deliver superior business results.
  • 2. 2 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 Executive Summary Robby the Robot. Optimus Prime. C-3PO. Cyberdyne Systems Model 101 (a.k.a. “The Terminator”). Cute, helpful or just plain terrifying, these are what come to mind when the word “automation” is invoked: classic interpretations of humanoid robots that replace people to do “things” better (or sometimes worse) than we can. Of course, the most common real-world robots are the ones that make cars, unload ships, assemble any number of products or even vacuum floors. But our latest research reveals that an entirely different scenario is emerging, in which humans are working smarter with sophisticated software to automate business tasks, which, in turn, is generating rich process data that drives meaningful insights, value and outcomes for businesses. To understand what the future holds for intelligent automation, we surveyed 537 North American and European organizations, ranging from banks and insurers (property/casualty/life), to healthcare payers (see methodology, page 22). Our findings reveal significant new trends. The first centers around the ability of intelligent automation to improve materially upon what people can do, as well as unlock meaning from data using process analytics. In some cases, organizations are automating work completely through digitization by re-imagining and instrumenting a process from its inception to harness the power of emerging digital technologies, such as social, mobile, analytics and cloud (or the SMAC StackTM ). Our research also shows that through these technologies, humans are attaining new levels of process efficiency, such as improved operational cost, speed, accuracy and throughput volume. By using increasingly more astute technologies, smart businesses are doing a much better job of tackling complex process opportunities. In short, they are fast becoming force-multipliers to people who are still essential to process work in banking, healthcare, life sciences and insurance. Three key data sets and findings substantiate this point of view: • “Money:” Process automation is saving substantial amounts of it,
  • 3. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 3 today. Automation is empowering businesses to work smarter, with fewer people “doing the process;” nearly one-fifth of respondents achieved greater than 15% cost savings through automation in the past year. Executives also predict that the number of people directly tasked with performing process delivery will contract significantly in the coming years — and in some areas, this may be happening faster than we realized. • “Meaning-making:” The data generated by automation will radically improve process outcomes. Beyond cost savings, the yield of process data generated by automation is perhaps a far more profound benefit. Roughly 50% of respondents see automation (and 44% see analytics) as significantly improving processes over the next three to five years — compared with only 30% for onshore process delivery (and only 28% for offshore/nearshore). Moreover, nearly half of the banks surveyed (45%) have seen at least 10% revenue growth from analytics aligned with their front office and customer-facing functions, a number that is anticipated to rise to nearly three out of every four banks during the next three to five years. • “Money and meaning:” Digital value chains can reform processes that are smart and data-rich. Sometimes, “doing analytics” or merely automating an existing process falls short. Prompted by innovative competitors, a full digital re-think for making money and meaning may be crucial to transform core processes in the future of work. By using next-generation SMAC-based technologies, companies are completely re-imagining customer, supplier and partner interactions. By igniting the digital information surrounding these entities — or Code HaloTM — organizations can realize business process insights in far greater fidelity than has ever been possible before.1 At the same time, impregnability is essential, and data security cannot be compromised: 52% of respondents told us that data security “is, will be and shall remain” the biggest digitization issue they confront now and in the future. • “Monday morning:” Where to begin. The automation of knowledge processes derived from digital strategies is no longer fiction. Data from many progressive adopters reveals a set of practical actions that leaders can take now to start generating value, quickly.
  • 4. A New, Complementary Symbiosis for Repetitive and Rote Process Work Humans performing knowledge work today are complemented by technology in increasingly high-value ways. As a result, we are entering a new era of human- machine interface for repetitive and rote processes, in which software tools have emerged as “the robots” for knowledge work. Because they are not taking over physical work such as welding or painting, these automation tools aren’t immedi- ately recognizable as “robots” — but the impact they’re driving is real. Some have called this “robotic process automation.” While true, use of this semi- technical term can convey the wrong impression. In spite of significant software tool development, we still do not have Robby the Robot or “the Borg” running around our call centers, medical management facilities or insurance enrollment offices. Nevertheless, technology luminaries from innovators such as Tesla Motors and SpaceX worry about “summoning the demon” of artificial intelligence, “our biggest existential threat.”2 Extraordinary theoretical thinkers like Stephen Hawking warn that automation and artificial intelligence could potentially be “the worst mistake in history,”3 without additional evidence of their positive business and societal impact. Consider the counterpoint from Google’s Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt: “There’s lots of evidence that when computers show up, wages go up … get people prepared for this new world, so they can maximize their income.” 4 The debate rages, presenting huge societal and political issues that are outside the scope of this paper but are poised for intensified debate for years to come. But instead of worrying about “the Terminator,” consider a different metaphor from the canon of classic sci-fi films. In the 1986 movie sequel Aliens, Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver’s character) commands and controls a robotic exosuit cargo loader to triumph over her greatest challenge. Ripley harnesses the strength and power of the loader’s hardware and software to dramatically augment her human grit, creativity, determination, decision-making, adaptability and will to succeed. In short, instead of “I, Robot,” think about a new plotline of people and machines working in tandem, one that features “the Robot and I.” Our new research spotlights a deeper understanding of “how far, how fast” develop- ments in process automation, analytics and other operational models will play out. While we have miles to travel, our findings reveal that robots don’t dominate the process automation space, but rather work in tandem to help make smart humans smarter and businesses more agile. Software tools have emerged as “the robots” for knowledge work. In our survey, we probed leaders’ mindsets regarding process change enabled by next-generation process automation, by asking a simple question: “Imagine a world of unlimited possibilities. If you could create totally new business processes ‘from scratch,’ briefly describe the approach you would take.” The responses — which appear throughout this paper — help shed context and insight on what’s on the minds of enterprise leaders on the cusp of this shift. 4 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 “In Their Own Words
  • 5. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 5 Show Me the Money: Process Automation Is Saving Substantial Amounts of It, Today Saving money — and driving greater impact from process optimization — has been a managerial mantra governing automation technologies since the dawn of computing. Organizations want new and innovative ways of achieving and maximizing efficiency from people and processes. For years, the business process services industry has been massively focused on lean principles (or process elimi- nation by another name). What levers remain to be pulled? Now that “the robots have arrived,” intelligent automation is the next wave of efficiency gain in business processes. And, as shown in Figure 1, the top drivers for automation go beyond cost savings, to reduced error rates, better management of repeatable tasks and better standardization of process workflow. SMART HANDS AND SMART ROBOTS: “I envision the seamless integration of automated processes, manual processes, instructions and learning materials required to execute manual processes, audit trails, checklists, etc., all combined in a single tool or view.” — IT Manager, Information/Media/Entertainment, Nordic region All Things Being Equal, Robots and Humans Aren’t Standardization leads to scale. And while both humans and robots can drive standard process delivery at scale, an open question is which can do it better? Something has to give: Process standardization is the leading value ascribed by respondents to their people-based resources today (see Figure 9, page 14). But many organizations are also starting to use robots as a powerful lever for process standardization too, while leveraging skilled human workers for their unique talents (e.g., five years ago, would a Twitter-wrangler have been someone’s job description for customer management processes?). In other words, when robots can do the rote tasks less expensively, leaders need to take stock and shift people to more complex processes that allow them to apply innate human talents and creativity in ways that robots just can’t do. 21% 19% 14% 11% 21% Reduce error rates Improve standardization of process workflow Better manage repeatable tasks Reduce reliance on multiple systems/ screens to complete the process Create a frictionless, “straight-through” process What’s a Human to Do? Use Robots to Get Smarter What are the current or potential impacts of the following process automation attributes on your business? Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: 537 Figure 1
  • 6. To Find the Money, Go with the (Work)Flow To establish a meaningful baseline, we asked leaders where their processes were most automated today (see Figure 2). For this purpose, we defined “automation” as including any functional activity that was previously performed manually and is now handled via technology platforms or process automation tools like robotic process automation (RPA) platforms. Thus, what a lot of leaders currently regard as “automation” is likely driven by core IT investments (i.e., the implementation of specialized enterprise apps such as ERP, CRM or BPM). All of these can drive automation — but not to the level that robotic process automation can by mimicking human actions at the software pre- sentation layer or user interface, and interacting with multiple applications, just as a human would. BPM TO STREAMLINE WORKFLOW: “Link every process to one software and follow one workflow. Right now, we have many programs and processes running in parallel.”— SM Operations Director, Retail & Hospitality, Benelux region Persistent and Pervasive Automation — Today, Tomorrow and in the Future Percent of process automation as gauged by workflow, where automation is defined as “any area that was done manually and is now done via technology platforms, process automation tools and even macros to support the process.” Policy service & contract administration HEALTHCARE PAYERS PC&L INSURANCE Fraud & abuse services Medical management Overpayment recovery services Claims coding & processing Member/provider customer support Enrollment & billing services Risk, fraud & compliance New business, underwriting & customer support Claims administration New product & service development Customer management & sales Supply chain Human resources Middle-office or customer facing Front-office or customer facing Back-office or support functions Finance & accounting 0% Now In 1-2 years In 3-5 years 0% 10 20 30 40 50 60 10 20 30 40 50 60 BANKS HORIZONTAL PROCESSES 6 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: Healthcare payers: 102; PC&L Insurers: 115; Banks: 153 Figure 2
  • 7. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 7 Against these parameters, our findings are surprising on two levels: 1. There is a large amount of workflow that respondents think is currently “automated” (25% to 40% of workflow, in most cases). 2. Against that backdrop, the expected increases in business process automation over the next five years may seem insignificant (10% to 20%, in most cases), pointing to a lack of understanding by business leaders and decision-makers as to what’s at stake. For example: Think about the “long tail” of process steps that haven’t been automated by core systems. These are usually process workarounds that entail manual inputs to get systems “ready to get ready” for processing knowledge work (i.e., claims processing, audit preparation, logging customer contacts, verifications, etc.). As a percent of overall workflow, these steps may be more generalized in terms of specialization, follow rote procedures, involve regulatory requirements or require rapid response. With further process automation, those incremental steps are likely to be handled by robots, and the collective, cumulative impact of the “long tail” — in terms of cost — is likely to be significant. AUTOMATION FOR THE “LONG TAIL:” “The more we move toward mobile work, the more time we’ll have. We want to see the automation of all the very time- consuming, ‘little,’ tiresome things.” — Finance & Compliance Manager, Technology Products & Services, UK/Ireland region In aggregate, nearly one-fifth of respondents have achieved greater than 15% cost savings through automation in the past year (see Figure 3, next page). Moreover, 66% of all respondents expect at least 10% cost savings (again, using 2013 as a baseline) from automation in the long-term future. As a result, buyers and business process services providers will need to start anticipating and incorporating these levels of projected savings into their future plans and commercial models. Let’s look at it by industry: While 26% of banking respondents have enjoyed 15%-plus cost savings from automation in their front office and customer-facing functions compared with one year ago, 55% expect those same levels of savings (15% or more savings) within three to five years. It’s a similar story in just about every vertical and horizontal process domain. That’s good for all participants — especially when success is measured based on the outcome of cost savings, and less on the operational cost tied to the number of people “doing the process.” Quick Take Standards — Hold Them High and Automated When workflows become standardized, that process is very likely a good candidate for automation. For example, how many “right ways” are there to run a payroll or to adjudicate a straightforward insurance claim? Consider horizontal functions like accounts payable (through e-invoicing) and claims management (through auto-adjudication) as great examples that exist today. Tomorrow, you’ll see more automation (and just as likely, digital transformation) among industry processes like revenue cycle management in healthcare, and clinical data management in life sciences.
  • 8. 8 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 The Impact on People Performing Non- Differentiating, Rote Tasks Is Potentially Massive The executives we surveyed also predict that as a result of process automation, the number of people directly tasked with performing process delivery will contract significantly in the coming years — and in some areas, it may be happening faster than we realized. • Our data shows that the more “industrialized” general and administrative (G&A) functions are being impacted the most. As Figure 4 (page 10) shows, at least one in five companies surveyed have already seen a 25% reduction in employees across supply chain, HR and F&A functions. • In the short term, healthcare payers are vertical-industry trailblazers. They’re pushing frontiers of cost reduction through automation, especially when it comes to middle-office functions such as claims coding and processing, in which over one-quarter of payer respondents have seen at least 15% cost sav- ings year-over-year (see Figure 3). Human resources Finance & accounting Customer management & sales Supply chain New product/service development Front-office and customer-facing functions Middle-office or operational functions Back-office or support functions New business, underwriting & customer service Policy service and contract administration Claims administration Risk, fraud & compliance Enrollment & billing services Claims coding & processing Overpayment recovery services Fraud & abuse services Medical management Member/provider customer support EXPECTED IN 1-2 YEARS 3-5 YEARS HORIZONTAL PROCESSES BANKS INSURANCE HEALTHCARE PAYER 13% 15% 14% 17% 15% 26% 23% 19% 12% 18% 21% 21% 20% 28% 11% 11% 20% 17% 20% 26% 22% 25% 24% 39% 40% 34% 40% 36% 55% 40% 43% 39% 46% 53% 49% 35% 35% 30% 25% 22% 35% 41% 22% 28% 29% 30% 37% 34% 50% 41% 39% 39% 40% 47% FROM ONE YEAR AGO Robots Make a Money-Saving Assembly Line Percent of decision-makers realizing at least 15% cost savings across front-office, middle-office and back-office functions as a result of automation. Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: Healthcare payers: 102; PC&L Insurers: 115; Banks: 153 Figure 3
  • 9. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 9 • Among industry verticals, banks will see the highest levels of staff reduc- tion. As Figure 5 (see page 11) illustrates, banks are more inclined than other industries to automate their processes, often due to their need to better focus on customers. Banks emerged from the sub-prime crisis with the realization that standardized systems (technology), better risk underwriting (analytics) and dif- ferentiating customer service (SMAC platforms) can help drive stronger growth and expansion. We see these beliefs being reflected in the numbers around auto- mation as an on-ramp to these new approaches to process efficiency. To stay ahead of the curve, people performing routine business functions (and those tasked with managing them) will need to rethink how work is conducted, and how others in their organization will harness process automation for better outcomes. “HELLO COMPUTER” — VOICE-ACTIVATED DATA RETRIEVAL: “(I envision being able to) search for files simply by a code name spoken into a microphone that’s attached to a laptop. No need to search in documented folders.” — Operations Manager, Retail & Hospitality, North American region As shown in Figures 4 and 5 (on pages 10 and 11), this is happening with a similar degree of impact in horizontal and industry-specific process areas. Depending on the environment, the degree of staff reduction can be highly dynamic; the speed with which automated process robots perform is limited only by underlying systems. For continuous processes (say 24x7 functions such as customer service and support), automation provides almost unlimited availability, performing the same tasks over and over, with near-zero defects and complete auditability. Quick Take Making the “Swivel-chair Process” Obsolete Even though many processes are technology-rich, they’re still people-intensive and require staff to toggle between multiple systems and screens to achieve “last-mile” integration of data checking, inputting, searching or collating to drive an outcome. This type of “swivel-chair” work is eliminated as manual process steps are diminished, leading to straight-through process com- pression. And with scalability built into the code and architec- ture of these processes, the need for people-based process delivery is further reduced with rule- and value-based logic of machine-learning and artificial intelligence — or in some cases, subjective judgment — that is, smart people working in tandem with intelligent automation.
  • 10. 10 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 As a result, people need to stay ahead of the curve, not by being “faster or cheaper” but by developing, honing and capitalizing on the capabilities that are uniquely human and cannot be replicated today by automated software. Such activities include collaboration and teamwork with a highly diverse workforce (and yes, that includes robots), creativity, curiosity, constructive problem-solving, inventiveness, empathy and physical touch (say, in medical management). And of course, humans must focus on jobs that require a high degree of intelligence — at least more than what can be applied today by any robot.5 Show Me the Meaning: The Data Generated from Automation Will Radically Improve Process Outcomes “Tools help make delivery better” may sound simple, but it hides a significant trap: An automation-for-automation’s-sake strategy fails to focus on the real prize — an explosion of rich process-level data. That’s where analytics comes in. The importance of analytics for processing insight and meaning-making is immense. The reality is that today’s digital age — compared with last century’s industrial age — presents an unprecedented ability to make business meaning from massive amounts of data. If you aren’t “doing” big data, the story goes, you’re in trouble, and terrible things will happen.6 Supply Chain 27% 30% Human Resources Finance & Accounting Customer Management & Sales New Product/ Service Development FROM ONE YEAR AGO 3-5 YEARS 23% 28% FROM ONE YEAR AGO 3-5 YEARS 22% 24% FROM ONE YEAR AGO 3-5 YEARS 17% 17% FROM ONE YEAR AGO 3-5 YEARS 16% 27% FROM ONE YEAR AGO 3-5 YEARS Automation’s Force-Multiplier to Work Smarter, with Fewer People ‘Doing the Process’ Percent of decision-makers realizing or anticipating greater than 25% FTE reduction as a result of automation in their horizontal processes. Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: 537 Figure 4
  • 11. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 11 The list of game-changing and differentiating examples of process analytics is immense, especially when RPA tools using artificial intelligence and machine learning to drive time-sensitive outcomes are applied. Examples include real-time dynamic fleet optimization for destination and delivery capacity for logistics; millions of miles of analysis of “hard brakes” for dynamic auto policy pricing; or collation of huge volumes of clinical data for optimized pharma- ceutical trials. But leaders we interviewed are currently limiting the use of analytics — for the most part — to process optimiza- tion alone (see Figure 6, page 12). At the same time, they are succeeding with using analytics in customer-facing processes to boost revenues. That’s great news for their customers, and is a trend we see continuing across most customer-facing work.7 An automation-for-automation’s-sake strategy fails to focus on the real prize — an explosion of rich process-level data. That’s where analytics comes in. The Industry Outlook for People and Automation Percent of decision-makers anticipating greater than 25% FTE reduction as a result of automation in their industry- specific processes. Banking & Financial Services 19% 28% NOW 3-5 YEARS Healthcare Payers 19% 16% NOW 3-5 YEARS Insurance 15% 23% NOW 3-5 YEARS • Cost savings plus new revenue streams. Well over half (55%) of respondents say that reducing costs is the key outcome of their analytics efforts today — and importantly, another 47% say understanding customer requirements is a core strategic goal. In essence, buyers are using insights to improve operations, while also opening new channels to revenue by understand- ing customers better — directly as a result of their business analytics activities. • Keeping process mechanics in plain sight — but what about doing things differently? Optimizing processes and driving deeper business insights dominates current analytics thinking. For a lot of companies, analytics may present unanticipated insights that allow them to change and run their businesses differently — especially in the face of disruptive moves brought by digital innovation. Over 40% of survey respondents say they value better process mechanics — such as throughput, quality and streamlining of processes — more highly than outcomes such as prioritizing business needs, better market penetration and segmentation or, last on the list, creating new products/services. IT’S NOT JUST ABOUT CUTTING COSTS: “We don’t want to cut costs, but increase sales. We want to optimize workflows and align business processes to speed up sales cycles and customer satisfaction. Big data analytics are needed to pinpoint those trends.” — IT Manager, Information/Media/Entertainment, Benelux region Generating substantial revenue growth among customers is also a major outcome. As illustrated in Figure 7 (page 13), among vertical industries, nearly half of banks (45%) have seen at least 10% revenue growth from analytics aligned with their front-office and customer-facing functions, a figure that is anticipated to rise to Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: Healthcare payers: 102; PC&L Insurers: 115; Banks: 153 Figure 5
  • 12. nearly three out of every four banks in three to five years (a collective 73%). It’s a similar story among insurance companies and healthcare payers as well, where customer processes are already analytics-driven and revenue growth is already flowing today, and is anticipated to continue in the future. DIGITAL BANKING + BIG DATA: “(I envision) digital banking, with customer-driven processes, with built-in relationship management, as well as big data to identify customer needs in an attractive and user-friendly 24x7 solution.” — IT Manager, Banking & Financial Services, Nordic region Using Intelligent Automation and Insights to Make Smart People Smarter The benefits are clear for using automation to release new volumes of data that is ripe for analytics. But today, calibration of service delivery models — from onshore and offshore sourcing, big data analytics and automation — is essentially a toss-up. Respondents clearly envision a future generation of processes that will be automated and intelligent. As shown in Figure 8 (next page), exactly half of respondents see automation — and 44% see analytics — as delivering a positive impact to processes in three to five years. Compare that with only 30% for onshore process delivery. In other words, organizations that can master smart robots tethered to smart data will outpace rivals who don’t (or can’t). DATA: WHAT I WANT, WHEN I WANT IT: “First of all, increase the speed and accuracy of all technologies used. Next I would like to see a more structured output and constant access to real-time data.” — Operations Manager, Retail & Hospitality, Benelux region Leaders concur that robots are here today, and more are coming. Our research unequivocally shows that smart robots automate processes to save money but that they also improve accuracyandreliability.Yes,robotsdothesame tasks over and over, with zero variance and significantly fewer errors. But this is not just a story about the rise of the smart machines. Robots still need oversight to monitor, orches- trate, coordinate and remediate problems if something goes wrong. While much focus is placed on making smart people smarter (see Figure 9, page 14), the leading benefit of peo- ple-powered processes today is to standard- ize delivery (primary benefit, cited by 26% of respondents), followed by improved domain Process Analytics: Show Me the Meaning (Making) Percent of decision-makers citing the current use of analytics for the following outcomes Reducing costs 55% 47% 43% 42% 39% 37% 36% 28% 23% Understanding customer requirements Better process throughput & quality Streamlining processes Prioritizing business needs Better market penetration & segmentation Enhancing process accuracy Optimizing product portfolio Creating new products/services Organizations that can master smart robots tethered to smart data will outpace rivals who don’t (or can’t). 12 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: 537 Figure 6
  • 13. expertise and skills of subject matter experts, including language capabilities (second most popular response, at 20%). But automation has its limits — and there are some things that robots just can’t do (medical management, underwriting, case reviews, speak or comprehend colloquial slang, etc.). While automation is currently perceived as the “hot” delivery model, hot things still need a trivet so the proverbial table doesn’t get burned. That’s where a blended model of automation working in tandem with people can provide complementary outcomes. And there is no doubt that the domain skills of many subject matter experts will continue to exist outside the realm of what we can expect from robots, at least in the short term. In order to really capitalize on the interplay of people and automation, organizations must master the resulting data. And that data is the product of automation and digitiza- tion. By automating systems to better sense, predict and interpret the data they produce, employees can work heads up, not down, with intelligence from digital processes supporting Member/provider customer support Claims coding & processing INSURANCE New business, underwriting & customer service BANKS Front office & customer-facing functions 42% 15% 8% 13% 13% 13% 17% 38% 36% 45% 25% 8% HEALTHCARE PAYERS FROM ONE YEAR AGO EXPECTED IN 1-2 YEARS 3-5 YEARS Ramping up Analytics … To Ramp up Revenue Percent of respondents realizing/anticipating at least 10% of revenue growth achieved as a result of data analytics within the following selected industry-specific processes. Fifty percent of respondents see automation (and 44% see analytics) as delivering a positive impact to processes in three to five years. Now 3 to 5 years 20% 24% 16% 27% Process automation Figure 1 50% Process automationProcess analytics/ big data 44% Process analytics/ big data Onshore process delivery 30% Onshore process delivery Off-/near- shore process delivery 28% Off-/near- shore process delivery THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 13 Global Delivery, Analytics, Automation Working in Tandem – Today and Tomorrow Percent of respondents rating the following four service delivery models as “significant” or “profound/transformational” (4 or 5, on a scale of 1-5) in terms of their overall ability to positively impact business processes. Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: Healthcare payers: 102; PC&L Insurers: 115; Banks: 153 Figure 7 Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: 537 Figure 8
  • 14. their own smart brains. By making processes digital from the outset, businesses can capture information about the movements of people, goods, information and services through space and time, shrinking customer decision times. Consider the Internet of Things, where sensors — sure to include nanotechnologies coupled with artificial intelligence — are beginning to totally digitize and automate processes in a straight-through data flow. Digitizing one or several pieces of an industry process value chain can impact the health of the whole business. Consider the steps you need to take now by picking your process pressure points for success. And then calibrate where, how and when smart technologies like automation can complement the workforce, and make smart people smarter. 26% Improved process standardization 20% Improved domain expertise and skills of SMEs, including language capabilities 18% Better management of distributed activities done in parallel 16% Improved management of process volume19% Better management of asynchronous, time-consuming tasks Quick Take To Err Is Human — at What Cost to Process? Ask yourself a question: Are the people delivering my processes today adding value or injecting risk? For example, in insurance, the cost of miscoding on claims adds up to millions per year, not to mention the decline in client satisfaction resulting from multiple claims. It doesn’t have to be that difficult; with automation applied, insurers can achieve 80% first-pass accuracy through auto-adjudication. Power to the People: The Value of Onshore-Nearshore-Offshore Human Staffing (vs. Automation) 14 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: 537 Figure 9
  • 15. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 15 Show Me the Money and the Meaning: Digital Value Chains Can Reform Processes that Are Smart, Data-Rich — and Secure It’s no surprise that analytics conducted at the process level can deliver a quantifi- able return on investment today, a result that is expected to accelerate over time. But there may be a gnawing concern that applying a robot as a dance partner to an “as-is” process, for instance, still leaves organizations woefully short of the truly differentiated ballet of today’s high-flying, competitive outliers that have disrupted entire industries through process digitization.8 SOCIAL MEDIA FOR PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT: “The potential of social media is immense. [It will have a] revolutionizing impact on processes like product and technology development, and communicating with customers.” — SM & IT Director, Banking & Financial Services, Germany Process digitization can also radically accelerate and transform data analytics — and business models. As shown in Figure 10 (above), nearly one-third of respon- dents cite improved quality/consistency/believability in the data they’re getting from digital process initiatives, and 27% report easier integration across processes. Applying a robot as a dance partner to an “as-is” process still leaves organizations woefully short of the truly differentiated ballet of today’s high-flying, competitive outliers that have disrupted entire industries through process digitization. Digitize to Analyze: The Impact of Digital Processes on Meaning-Making Percent of respondents citing the impact of digital process technologies on running better analytics across processes (multiple responses allowed). 32% 27% 21% 20% Easier data integration across process Improve volume of data yield from process Improved quality/consistency/“believability” of data Better impact/value/insight of combined analytics output Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: 537 Figure 10
  • 16. 16 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 It’s All About the Data: Challenges Associated with Efforts to Digitize Percent of respondents citing the following issues as being the biggest challenges associated with their efforts to digitize processes (multiple responses allowed). 48 % 36 % 41 % 36 % DATA ACCESS ADEQUATE INTERNAL SKILL SETS TO ANALYZE DATA DATA QUALITY INABILITY TO ATTAIN STRAIGHT- THROUGH PROCESSING INADEQUATE INTERNAL SKILL TO AUTOMATE PROCESSES 52 % 46 % DATA SECURITY What’s also changing is the impact of digital processes on value chains and operating models. Each industry and its processes — whether claims management in insurance, or reconciliation or mortgage processing in banks — is swiftly adopting new process models. Harnessing the power of digital smart machines and AI, relationships that were traditionally transactional are now “interactional;” that is, rather than being “once-and-done,” they involve multiple interactions, and the more you can learn about a customer, supplier, partner — or even employee — the more meaningful each subsequent transaction can become. By the same token, value is more aligned with process data than with the process itself. As operational models focus more on services or outputs, they enable orga- nizations to build new, truly flexible and adaptable process models that can be quickly piloted and refined — or allowed to “fail fast.” As a result, digital processes are being re-formed in new, cost-effective and powerful ways that unlock meaning through analytics.9 The power of autonomous machine learning and artificial intel- ligence is amplified in scenarios such as these, especially when data is created at massive scale. When an intelligent robot finds an anomalous or novel situation, it can flag it and ask, “So now what?” This initiates a verification process that can be fine-tuned using machine learning, covering everything from name-matching, to graph analysis and workflow decisions. The larger the sample size of data, the better the decision-making will be. Making the World of Digital Data Safe for Smart Process Adoption: The Security Imperative Digital technologies and digital processes can only be effective if the data source is credible and usable. However, it’s not as simple as it sounds. When asked about the biggest challenges associated with efforts to digitize processes, executives said that data security “is, will be and shall remain” the biggest issue they confront, now and in the future (see Figure 11). Looking at these and other top challenges demonstrates that — despite current excitement for future process innovations — leaders are proceeding with “eyes wide open” to the potential risks: • Data security tops all challenges related to digital processes. Fifty-two percent of respon- dents cite data security as the chief issue today. As digital processes proliferate, and as leaders see the value they create, an entirely new eco- system of value-added services will develop to ensure the security, risk, privacy and compli- ance of the value chain of information these processes generate. • The issue isn’t likely to go away. Forty-five percent of respondents continue to foresee data security as the defining digital process chal- lenge, even three to five years out. Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: 537 Figure 11
  • 17. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 17 Creating a Progressive Pole Position in an Unevenly Distributed Race Organizations need to do much more than articulate intent to modernize their processes. We see distinct characteristics for companies that have implemented some form of automation, and use analytics to create newer products and penetrate new markets. However, our study also shows that not everyone is completely onboard. There is general agreement on the benefits of intelligent automation and digitization, but organizations are at various stages of adoption and implementa- tion of digital strategies. Among our respondent base of 537 leaders, we further segmented the leaders — a group we call “Process Progressives” — from the rest of the pack (see Figure 12). “Fence-Sitters” are primarily characterized by having dipped their toes into some automation of front-, middle- and back-office functions (less than 10% cite automation of core processes) and, as such, are far behind the Progressives. “Laggards” are far behind the Progressives in their current automation practices and don’t tend to use analytics for process optimization and other benefits. Progressives are characterized by significant use of automation for functions outside of core back-office functions; they are also aggressive users of process analytics for innovation (creating and optimizing new products and services). They also — wisely — attach a premium to data security and are more acutely aware of the technical barriers and skill deficits that could potentially slow down or inhibit the adoption of digitization. Progressives consti- tuted about one-third of respondents. • Progressives are generously rewarded for their process automation with cost savings. About half (49%) cite a 10% or higher reduction in process costs due to automation. Progressives Laggards Fence Sitters 31% 30% 40% 30% 38% 52% 39% 31% 8% BANKING INSURANCE HC PAYERS Three Distinct Types of Companies on Various Stages of the Digital Journey Percent of respondents — by industry – that fall into the segments. Source: Cognizant Center for the Future of Work Base: 537 Figure 12
  • 18. 18 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 • Progressives are further along the journey of automation than other seg- ments. At least half have automated some part of their back-office processes, such as HR, finance, CRM and supply chain. Progressive adopters have also taken automation to some of their middle- office and customer-facing functions (such as risk, fraud and compliance). Since Progressives draw from all verticals equally, this broader adoption is evidence of organizational attitude and drive toward digitization, rather than simply a reflection of industry dynamics. Analytics among Progressives Spurs Innovation Leading to Revenue Growth Our study shows that Progressives are about three times more likely to employ analytics to feed into their innovation process than the other two market segments. • A third of Progressives cite revenue growth of at least 10% from process analytics today. Tomorrow, 50% expect revenue benefits of more than 10% as a result of analytics, and that number rises further to 61% in the long-term (three to five years). • Progressives have a keen awareness of how to leverage process analytics for top- and bottom-line benefits. This ranges from identifying new market oppor- tunities and better serving customer needs (revenue generation), to optimizing various internal processes (cost optimization). All business process leaders need to address the fast-arriving enabling technologies, techniques and tools that will allow them to digitize their processes as a new basis for competition and “managing on meaning.” The change is already happening: Many progressive adopters are already well ahead of their peers by embracing ways to begin the journey to new levels of process efficiency, driving different paths to revenue growth, and applying new possibilities for operational models and their process-level industry value chains. Calibrating a sourcing strategy that carefully balances process automation and dig- itally-fueled analytics is one of the most important trends in business services, and leaders need to take steps now to win in the coming era of change. To accelerate your journey to the future of process automation, don’t wait. Start today, by imagining how the future of work will look tomorrow when digital machines, information and processes help humans do their jobs better, faster and with greater impact. Calibrating a sourcing strategy that carefully balances process automation and digitally-fueled analytics is one of the most important trends in business services, and leaders need to take steps now to win in the coming era of change.
  • 19. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 19 Monday Morning: Where Can I Begin? Starting Points to Assess Process Readiness for Change Inertia is not an option, and for almost every business, it won’t be enough to simply flip a light-switch and drive process change overnight. Organizations will need to accept and embrace different process approaches for better outcomes to deliver higher impact. (Hint: it’s not about the number of “people doing the process.”) Among the key considerations: • With automation, make sure you’re keeping business outcomes as the “prime directive” to drive, guide, scale and test for success. Look for transaction-based or outcome-based pricing models.10 In other words, the days are over for simply “throwing more bodies at the task” to get it done. With powerful new technologies of automation, the capabilities of fewer people are magnified by robots. • Extract data (and distill meaning-making) to refine the fuel that drives pro- cess excellence. Leaders will prioritize data that drives down costs, improves un- derstanding of customers, boosts speed and quality, and streamlines processes. Revenue potential starts — not surprisingly — with customers. Use those process- es to get started — and apply new technologies of automation and digitization to know customers, as well as focus on the right sets of data that help drive that knowledge. These are the “big” considerations, and you’ll not only want to rate them on Monday morning, but also continuously revisit them as lodestars for your organization’s process journey in the years ahead. But there are approaches, especially around readiness for process automation, in which months of readiness assessment can be compressed into as little as a week, and piloting and testing compressed into two to four weeks of development to showcase results. Some simple questions to ask prior to a process readiness assessment include: “How do I get rid of paper-based process inputs, such as invoices or claims, and get my process truly ‘digital’ from the outset?” “Do the people delivering my processes today add value or inject risk?” “What are we learning about our business or industry value chain as data is analyzed, and does it help smart people to make better judgments?” Steps to Take Now on the Journey to the Future of Process It’s not a radical fantasy to view automation and digitization as disruptors of the “old way of doing things.” Intelligent automation is here, today. But the emphasis on sheer people power is different and changing fast. Remember “the Robot and I” — this is about “Ripley and the Loader:” smart people, working powerfully with intelligent automation to impact processes that can efficiently and effectively move the needle on business strategy. How will you respond? Scan your process topography and target processes (or fragments or pieces of sub-processes, say, auto-adjudication in claims management) that might lend themselves to being low-hanging fruit for automation. Consider the following as a simple, yet effective checklist to begin the assessment: The days are over for simply “throwing more bodies at the task” to get it done. With powerful new technologies of automation, the capabilities of fewer people are magnified by robots.
  • 20. 20 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 • Perform an automation readiness assessment. Map processes to a level of de- tail that includes inputs, processes and outputs. Scan the market for tested and ready-to-implement technologies that have established tangible proof of success. Apply minimally invasive automation technologies for efficiency gain today, but keep your eyes on the prize for where transformation for differentiation makes the most sense tomorrow. • Analyze your company at the process level. Review in detail your processes as they exist today (new product/service development, sales and customer relation- ship management, operations, etc.). Infuse a digital process plan by re-imagining moments of customer engagement or constituent journeys. Target tangible pro- cess metrics: cost-per-claim, clinical trial yield, healthcare unit cost, fraud preven- tion rates, etc. • Help humans evolve toward the work of tomorrow. Start by giving employ- ees access to digital processes and machines that help them do their jobs better, smarter and with more meaningful impact to the business. It’s not about the number of people tied to “doing the process;” it’s about outcomes and making smart people even smarter. • Create, educate and inculcate “the vision.” Move from recognizing that some- thing “needs to happen” to “making something happen.” Business processes — automated, digital or otherwise — are useless if they don’t support a business strategy. That means helping smart people make smarter decisions in support of differentiating activities. Get true alignment and buy-in to design, develop and deliver — and move fast to get “runs on the board” to maintain and sustain interest. • Assign “tiger/SWAT teams,” including a mini-CIO (plus experience/design). Most IT professionals are hard-pressed to fulfill the demands of current delivery, but there are likely many extremely valuable (and digitally-savvy) resources that would jump at the chance to become automation experts or join a digital process tiger team. Physically sit and co-locate these digital process change agents into the BUs. >> Keep them thinking about the new process anatomy, data and the “art of the possible,” including participatory design/research principles. >> Have them re-code moments of engagement (internal and customer-facing), using new technologies of intelligent automation. • Execute specific process projects — to learn fast, or “fail fast.” Be specific — don’t place resources and “hope for the best.” IT resources landing in a business unit without work assignments are often quickly marginalized and abandoned. Get creative and get moving — but within the “swim lanes” of the business or process strategy. Identify, develop and implement solutions for process automation or digital business transformation — fast — to successfully outrun the competition. Infuse a digital process plan by re-imagining moments of customer engagement or constituent journeys. Target tangible process metrics: cost-per-claim, clinical trial yield, healthcare unit cost, fraud prevention rates, etc.
  • 21. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 21 • Make “meaning-making” mean something powerful — fueled by process data. The imperatives to “do analytics” or “use big data” are just too broad to be mean- ingful. Instead, focus on a specific business process. Whether it’s your under- writing process, clinical drug trials, wealth management service, supply chain or customer relationship management process, focus on work that shapes at least 10% of your costs or revenues. To seize competitive advantage, look at the data that is — and could be — exchanged and used for value. Looking Forward: Racing Together — and Thriving — with the Robots Businesses need a fresh approach to their organization models and processes — and they need to digitize to analyze. Automation is a crucial new delivery model to make that happen. This study reveals new market insights that chart the progress in the journey so far, where process change is most likely to occur next in specific industries and, importantly, what you should do about it. Robotic process automation with sophisticated technologies is here to stay, and the “Robot and I” model — vs. “I, Robot” — is crucial to understanding what the future holds. The human spark is, and will remain, essential to how knowledge work is orchestrated and managed. What’s different is that technologies can now create more effective knowledge workers while simultaneously generating and capturing data that can improve processes and eliminate wasteful steps. Staying put is not an option; automation drives further efficiency gains by flattening, streamlining and straightening process workflows. The resulting data — ripe for analytics — becomes a force-multiplier of differentiation and process-level meaning tied to business strategy and successful outcomes. Our research opens the aperture on the possibilities. Some of them are intriguing, some are mind-bending, but all will usher in profound change. This is one of the most important trends in business services, and organizations need these insights to help them win in the era of automation and digital processes. And like a good science fiction movie, whether you like it or not, it’s coming soon — to a process near you. The human spark is, and will remain, essential to how knowledge work is orchestrated and managed.
  • 22. 22 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 Appendix 1: The Methodology Online panel-based research was conducted with decision-makers from banking and financial services, insurance and healthcare companies across North America and Europe. The sample also included companies from the pharmaceuticals, retail, hospitality and technology industries. The research was spread over four weeks during Q3 2014, with data gathered from 537 respondents, representing companies with $500 million to $3 billion in revenue. The research was conducted by an independent research agency (E2E Research) on behalf of Cognizant. Areas studied include: • Current automation, analytics and digital plans for key processes (list of processes provided in Appendix 2). • Anticipated plans for those processes in 12 to 24 months. • Anticipated plans for those processes in three to five years. • Changes in process architecture and staffing levels due to automation. • Relative impact of process automation, people-based staffing, analytics and strategic outcomes from digital processes. • Skills required for process digitization initiatives. This study was conducted across a variety of sectors, functions and geographies. Sectors Functions Banking & financial services Insurance (life, P&C, retirement, auto, etc.) Healthcare insurance (payers) Pharmaceuticals Retail & hospitality Technology – products & services Information, media & entertainment 28% 21% 19% 10% 17% 2% 3% CXO SVP, VP, Senior Director Director, Senior Manager Manager CXO SVP, VP, Senior Director Director, Senior Manager Manager CXO SVP, VP, Senior Director Director, Senior Manager Manager CXO SVP, VP, Senior Director Director, Senior Manager Manager CXO SVP, VP, Senior Director Director, Senior Manager Manager General Management Operations Marketing Finance & Compliance IT 8% 6% 9% 13% 5% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3% 5% 12% 7% 2% 2% 1% 12% CXO SVP, VP, Senior Director Director, Senior Manager Manager CXO SVP, VP, Senior Director Director, Senior Manager Manager CXO SVP, VP, Senior Director Director, Senior Manager Manager CXO SVP, VP, Senior Director Director, Senior Manager Manager CXO SVP, VP, Senior Director Director, Senior Manager Manager General Management Operations Marketing Finance & Compliance IT 8% 6% 9% 13% 5% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3% 5% 12% 7% 2% 2% 1% 12%
  • 23. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 23 Healthcare Payer • Enrollment & billing services • Claims coding and processing • Overpayment recovery services • Fraud & abuse services • Medical management • Member/provider customer support Insurance (Life, Property, Casualty) • New business, underwriting and customer service • Policy service and contract adminis- tration • Claims administration • Risk, fraud and compliance North America Europe 43% 57% Appendix 2: Process Definitions The processes studied are detailed below. Horizontal Processes • Human resources • Finance and accounting • Customer management and sales • Supply chain • New product/service development Banks • Front-office and customer-facing functions • Middle-office or operational functions • Back-office or support functions North America Europe 43% 57% Operating Regions
  • 24. 24 KEEP CHALLENGING January 2015 Footnotes 1 Understanding where, when and how that happens is a core principle of our book Code Halos: How the Digital Lives of People, Things, and Organizations are Changing the Rules of Business, by Malcolm Frank, Paul Roehrig and Ben Pring, published by John Wiley & Sons, April 2014, www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd- 1118862074.html. 2 Macrina Cooper-White, “Elon Musk Says Artificial Intelligence Research May Be ‘Summoning the Demon,’” The Huffington Post, Oct. 27, 2014, www.huffingtonpost. com/2014/10/27/elon-musk-artificial-intelligence_n_6053804.html. 3 “Stephen Hawking: Transcendence Looks at the Implications of Artificial Intelligence, but Are We Taking AI Seriously Enough,” The Independent, May 1, 2014, www.inde- pendent.co.uk/news/science/stephen-hawking-transcendence-looks-at-the-implica- tions-of-artificial-intelligence--but-are-we-taking-ai-seriously-enough-9313474.html. 4 Issie Lapowsky, “Google’s Eric Schmidt: Don’t Fear the Artificially Intelligent Future,” Wired, Dec. 9, 2014, www.wired.com/2014/12/eric-schmidt-ai/. 5 Ben Pring, “How to Beat the Robots,” Cognizant’s Center for the Future of Work, Nov. 28, 2014, www.futureofwork.com/article/details/how-to-beat-the-robots. 6 This is especially true when tied to “moments of magic” driven by Code Halos, when business processes can seemingly read the mind of their customers (i.e., “if you enjoyed product x, you’ll probably love product z”) and make their customers’ purchasing process easy, enjoyable, fun and seductive. 7 Paul Roehrig and Ben Pring, “The Value of Signal and the Cost of Noise,” Cognizant Center for the Future of Work, October 2013, www.cognizant.com/ InsightsWhitepapers/The-Value-of-Signal-and-the-Cost-of-Noise-The-New- Economics-of-Meaning-Making.pdf. 8 Malcolm Frank, Paul Roehrig, Ben Pring, “Code Rules: A Playbook for Managing at the Crossroads,” Cognizant Center for the Future of Work, June 2013, www.cognizant. com/Futureofwork/Documents/code-rules.pdf. 9 These findings are in line with those published in The Center for the Future of Work’s 2013 study, “The Value of Signal (and the Cost of Noise): The New Economics of Meaning Making,” June 2013, www.cognizant.com/InsightsWhitepapers/The-Value- of-Signal-and-the-Cost-of-Noise-The-New-Economics-of-Meaning-Making.pdf. This report — which examines the return on investment that data analytics generates — found that organizations had generated $766 billion in total economic benefit from their business analytics initiatives over the course of the last year. Much of that activity was oriented toward understanding the code being generated by digital processes. 10 Outcome-based process models might include providing incentives like business- benefit-based contracting or gain-sharing with a business process outsourcer, or moving from a people-based model to volume-based transaction pricing. Note: Code Halo™ and SMAC Stack™ are pending trademarks of Cognizant Technology Solutions. All company names, trade names, trademarks, trade dress, designs/logos, copyrights, images and products referenced in this white paper are the property of their respective owners. No company referenced in this white paper sponsored this white paper or the contents thereof.
  • 25. THE ROBOT & I: HOW NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE MAKING SMART PEOPLE SMARTER 25 About the Authors Robert Hoyle Brown is an Associate Vice-President in Cognizant’s Center for the Future of Work, and drives strategy and market outreach for the Business Process Services Practice. He is also a regular contributor to futureofwork.com, “Signals from the Future of Work.” Prior to joining Cognizant, he was Managing Vice-President of the Business and Applications Services team at Gartner, and as a research analyst, he was a recognized subject matter expert in BPO, cloud services/ BPaaS and HR services. He also held roles at Hewlett-Packard and G2 Research, a boutique outsourcing research firm in Silicon Valley. He holds a bachelor of arts degree from the University of California at Berkeley and, prior to his graduation, attended the London School of Economics as a Hansard Scholar. He can be reached at Robert.H.Brown@cognizant.com | LinkedIn: http://www. linkedin.com/pub/robertbrown/1/855/a47. Paul Roehrig, Ph.D., co-leads Cognizant’s Center for the Future of Work. Prior to joining Cognizant, Paul was a Principal Analyst at Forrester Research, where he researched and advised senior IT leadership on a broad range of topics, including sourcing strategy, trends and best practices. Paul also held key positions in planning, negotiation and successful global program implementation for customers from a variety of industries, including financial services, technology, federal government and telecommunications for Hewlett-Packard and Compaq Computer Corp. He holds a degree in journalism from the University of Florida and graduate degrees from Syracuse University. Paul can be reached at Paul.Roehrig@cognizant.com | Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/paul- roehrig/0/785/20/. Vineet Malhotra is the Senior Director of Marketing within Cognizant’s Business Process Services Practice. In this role, he heads the global marketing function, driving go-to- market strategy, market positioning and strategic solutions, and addressing customer ecosystem challenges through thought leadership and research. He has more than 20 years of experience across various industries and geographies, while working with global telecom and technology companies. Vineet can be reached at Vineet.Malhotra@ cognizant.com | LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/vineet-malhotra/0/a43/b19.
  • 28. World Headquarters 500 Frank W. Burr Blvd. Teaneck, NJ 07666 USA Phone: +1 201 801 0233 Fax: +1 201 801 0243 Toll Free: +1 888 937 3277 inquiry@cognizant.com European Headquarters 1 Kingdom Street Paddington Central London W2 6BD Phone: +44 (0) 207 297 7600 Fax: +44 (0) 207 121 0102 infouk@cognizant.com India Operations Headquarters #5/535, Old Mahabalipuram Road Okkiyam Pettai, Thoraipakkam Chennai, 600 096 India Phone: +91 (0) 44 4209 6000 Fax: +91 (0) 44 4209 6060 inquiryindia@cognizant.com © Copyright 2015, Cognizant. All rights reserved. No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the express written permission from Cognizant. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. All other trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their respective owners. TL Codex 1193 Cognizant’s Center for the Future of Work Cognizant’s Center for the Future of Work provides original research and analysis of work trends and dynamics, and col- laborates with a wide range of business and technology think- ers and academics about what the future of work will look like as technology changes so many aspects of our working lives. Learn more by visiting www.futureofwork.com. About Cognizant Cognizant (NASDAQ: CTSH) is a leading provider of information technology, consulting, and business process outsourcing ser- vices, dedicated to helping the world’s leading companies build stronger businesses. Headquartered in Teaneck, New Jersey (U.S.), Cognizant combines a passion for client satisfaction, technology innovation, deep industry and business process expertise, and a global, collaborative workforce that embod- ies the future of work. With over 75 development and delivery centers worldwide and approximately 199,700 employees as of September 30, 2014, Cognizant is a member of the NASDAQ-100, the S&P 500, the Forbes Global 2000, and the Fortune 500 and is ranked among the top performing and fastest growing companies in the world. Visit us online at www.cognizant.com or follow us on Twitter: Cognizant.