Every leader in IT is accustomed to using some sort of dashboard. Infrastructure leaders have network or server metrics on display. VPs of PMO have project status and health reports. Ticket queues, application performance metrics, security events, cloud spend, and so on. Each one represents real-time insights into how their world is doing, and the clickable opportunity to see more into a problem and take action against it.
COOs need the power of real-time operational reporting
It's time to give this same level of power to the COO. COOs and their leaders ask and are often left unfulfilled by answers to seemingly simple questions like “How long does it take to…” or “Who’s faster at…” or “What are we waiting on…”
Enter Business Process Automation (BPA). We’ve already touched on the rich ecosystem of RPA (Robotic Process Automation) suites and how they can handle the dry and mundane, whether through interaction with a person or completely autonomously. It’s time to talk about BPA suites and what they can mean for oversight into the human elements of processes.
One of the often-overlooked opportunities of automation is the ability to capture time-and-motion information about how the business is running. And this means not just through sampling this pod or that group, and only once a quarter. This is across the enterprise, every process, every time, and presented in a clean, real-time format.
BPA can drive real-time aggregation of all reporting
“But wait, Jamie! You said in a previous post that we shouldn’t automate every step of every process! How do we get information on how people are doing, let alone in real time?” Lots of organizations have some repository of documents, properly collated and indexed, containing any number of process flows, permissions, update histories, and more. They are lovingly curated by someone, maybe a team, in the office of the COO. These individuals look and act a lot like librarians, fiercely protective of the information in their care, chasing individuals who haven’t reviewed and affirmed the processes they own, and announcing with joy new additions to their shelves. Many of them will assert that the processes are followed diligently throughout the enterprise – why wouldn’t they be? – but lack the evidence to support their confidence.
BPA suites are process libraries, made real in the world. The real advantage that BPAs have over the common process library is that these include integrations with RPAs, ERPs, ITSMs, and Teams/Slack/email channels to initiate activity on the part of a robot or a person. And if the COO should decide the process needs to change, changing it within the BPA changes it within the world - immediately. The notifications, information shares, and outputs are shifted, across the enterprise seamlessly, all through the approved change process. These BPAs already drive the logging of every initiation, every interaction, and every error, so the only thing remaining is to ingest that log information into the data visualization platform of choice.
If an experienced data analyst has access to the RPA data, the BPA data, and other event logs, then it’s on to building the COO “State of the Enterprise” dashboard, with all the real (or near-real) time information an executive could want. Those previously unanswered questions about process efficiency and effectiveness become as easy to investigate as network latency or application performance.
If your COO is envious of their CIO partner’s dashboards for network, application, and data health and performance, reach out to us at Altiam Digital and let’s start laying the groundwork for the next phase of operational happiness and insight!
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