Higher Education Must Invest in Digital Now to Stay Relevant in the Sector
This report looks at the past, present, and future challenges institutes are trying to navigate when it comes to all things digital. As the future...
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The Robots are coming…
Robots aren’t coming to take over the world, they’re already here. They’re in our smartphones, Alexa’s, Google Home products, recommending our next Amazon purchases to us, measuring our steps….
And they could be our colleagues too; the digital workforce, less interested in stealing your sandwiches from the staff room fridge and more interested in doing all of the repetitive tasks that keep the human workforce away from all of the exciting parts of the job!
Robot colleagues?
If you think of a bot as a colleague, it’s easier to imagine what sort of tasks they could do:
What’s in it for me?
Higher Education Institutes are crammed with repetitive, manual processes. It’s in their nature to be super-helpful and put themselves out for their students, so staff take more and more on in the quest to deliver a great student experience. When we’re working with clients, we often find an army of administrators, undertaking boring tasks, putting up with legacy technology, inefficient processes, and disconnected data, all with the intention putting students first, and often at their own expense.
But if a bot could take on these tasks, staff would be freed up to do the value-added ones. They’d have capacity and time to be in the student hub face-to-face or virtually supporting students. They could use their judgement more effectively, tackle risk areas or help students with important and serious issues.
Will it work?
Bots don’t care that those tasks are boring. They don’t get tired, or have weekends and go on holiday, or make errors. If the process is mature, logic-based, and high in volume or frequency, a bot can learn it and replicate it.
And unlike complex and lengthy IT projects, bots work with your existing technology, so the project set up doesn’t require intricate IT support or development, or system integration.
They can be left to get on with tasks (unattended), working to a schedule or trigger, or be ready and waiting for staff to activate them (attended), working alongside staff collaboratively but freeing them up to take on more complex tasks.
We’re not sophisticated enough for bots
If large-scale digital transitioning is not for your Institute, Intelligent Automation is a great fit, because it works with your existing technical landscape. Institutes are doing this now; bots are already in the workforce – it’s absolutely possible.
And if you’re currently undertaking a digital transition, this is exactly the right time to look at Intelligence Automation capability and how it could work for you.
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