American Express Business Class Logo
  • Videos
    Business Platinum Membership Rewards: Earn & Redeem
    1 min watch
    Business Platinum Travel Benefits
    1 min watch
    No Preset Spending Limit
    1 min watch
    Pay Over Time
    1 min watch
    Julie Pauly, The Able Baker, Maplewood, NJ
    3 min watch
    Articles
    How Using a Business Credit Card Can Help Your Small Business
    5 min read
    Safeguarding Security, Unlocking Innovation: Exploring The New Era In B2B Payments
    15 min read
    Getting More Back from What You Spend: Unlocking Value with Business Platinum
    4 min read
    Virtual Cards 101: What Is a Virtual Credit Card and Why Might You Need It?
    6 min read
    What Is a Business Line of Credit?
    12 min read
    Testimonials
    The Perfect Pairing: With American Express Business Blueprint™ and Resy, the Gourmet Brunch Potential is Bottomless
    9 min read
    Raising the Standard: How American Express Helps Power the Legacy of Electrolift Inc.
    10 min read
    How a Mother-Daughter Team Designed Their Dream Business with Help from American Express
    7 min read
    How Amex Business Products Helped Smart Birdy Take Flight
    5 min read
    Prescription for Progress: How Sree Gari Took His Pharmacy Further with Support from American Express
    6 min read
  • Cash Flow
    Accounting
    Critical Numbers
    Saving Money
    ROI
    Account Receivable Payable
    See All Cash Flow
    Financing
    Raising Capital
    Loans
    Alternative Financing
    Self-Financing
    Venture Capital
    See All Financing
    Growth Opportunities
    Business Expansion
    Innovation
    Franchising
    Partnerships
    Importing & Exporting
    See All Growth Opportunities
    Strategy
    Driving Business Efficiencies
    Product Development
    Business Plan
    See All Strategy
  • Celebs Talk Business
    Patti Labelle Talks Digital Transformation
    2 min watch
    Nick Offerman Talks Supply Chains
    3 min watch
    Patti Labelle Talks Expense Management
    2 min watch
    Nick Offerman Talks Spend Capacity
    3 min watch
    See All Celebs Talk Business
    Small Business Stories
    Pascal and Daneen Lewis, Harlem Wine Gallery, New York, NY
    3 min watch
    Julie Pauly, The Able Baker, Maplewood, NJ
    3 min watch
    Maria Christie, Christie’s Seafood & Steaks, Houston, TX
    7 min read
    Alex Magruder and Julia Schnabel, The Little, East Hampton, NY
    9 min read
    See All Small Business Stories
  • Small Business
    Membership Rewards
    1 min watch
    Employee Cards
    1 min watch
    Travel Benefits
    1 min watch
    No Preset Spending Limit
    1 min watch
    Pay Over Time
    1 min watch
    Corporate
    Common Business Expenses and the Credit Cards That Can Help You Manage Them
    5 min read
    What Is Corporate Travel Management and Why Do You Need It?
    8 min read
    Virtual Cards 101: What Is a Virtual Credit Card and Why Might You Need It?
    6 min read
    Product Videos
    Let’s Talk Business Travel: Airports
    1 min watch
    Let’s Talk Business Travel: Hotels
    1 min watch
    Employee Cards
    1 min watch
    Membership Rewards
    1 min watch
    Member Resources
    How to Engage With Online Communities
    7 min read
    Earning and Using Membership Rewards® Points with Business Platinum
    6 min read
    4 Ways to Optimize Corporate Travel Management
    5 min read
    How to Calculate Net Income
    6 min read
    American Express Membership Guide: Backing Your Business, Backing You
    6 min read
  • amexLogo
    • Getting More Back from What You Spend: Unlocking Value with Business Platinum

      1 min read
    • How Using a Business Credit Card Can Help Your Small Business

      5 min read
    • Business Platinum Travel Benefits

      4 min watch
    • Cash Flow
    • Financing
    • Growth Opportunities
    • Strategy
    • Celebs Talk Business
    • Small Business Stories
    • Earning and Using Membership Rewards® Points with Business Platinum

      6 min read
    • American Express Membership Guide: Backing Your Business, Backing You

      6 min watch
    • Let’s Talk Business Travel: Airports

      1 min watch
  • amexLogo
    • Getting More Back from What You Spend: Unlocking Value with Business Platinum

      1 min read
    • How Using a Business Credit Card Can Help Your Small Business

      5 min read
    • Business Platinum Travel Benefits

      4 min watch
    • Cash Flow
    • Financing
    • Growth Opportunities
    • Strategy
    • Celebs Talk Business
    • Small Business Stories
    • Earning and Using Membership Rewards® Points with Business Platinum

      6 min read
    • American Express Membership Guide: Backing Your Business, Backing You

      6 min watch
    • Let’s Talk Business Travel: Airports

      1 min watch

Research

5 Ways Automation Will Change the Business Landscape

5 Ways Automation Will Change the Business Landscape

Related Content

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Summary
Email Icon
Facebook Icon
Twitter Icon
LinkedIn Icon

Automation, including robots and artificial intelligence, promise to change business as we know it. Discover how the business landscape will look in the coming years.

Julie Bawden-Davis American Express Business Class Freelance Contributor
October 02, 2024

      Much like the revolution created by the advent of the world wide web in the 1990s, automation promises to change the face of business. Advances in artificial intelligence, machine learning and robotics will inevitably transform today’s business landscape.

      According to a June 2019 study, “How Robots Change the Work,” by global advisory firm Oxford Economics, “The number of robots in use worldwide multiplied threefold over the past two decades, to 2.25 million. Trends suggest the global stock of robots will multiply even faster in the next 20 years, reaching as many as 20 million by 2030.” (These figures were derived from an econometric analysis by Oxford Economics involving various studies on robotics.)

      Retailers like Walmart, Giant Eagle and Amazon have been using robots extensively for a wide variety of tasks, including cleaning, inventory management and loading and unloading merchandise.

      “It's already become obvious that automation is going to alter and disrupt every corner of the global economy,” says David Sessford, CEO of Ready Steady Sell. His company’s website and marketing operations have been affected by automation. They plan to use AI-powered digital agents for managing customer relations online in the future.

      “Even now, we're already seeing the first effects of robotics in retail stores, as well as AI-powered chatbots on e-commerce websites,” says Sessford. “Companies that understand the automation shift early and navigate it with aplomb will be the ones left standing when the dust settles.”

      Almost all business functions and industries are being affected by automation, believes Hitendra Chaturvedi, a professor at the Arizona State University W.P. Carey School of Business.

      “This includes retail, manufacturing, healthcare, financial, publishing, banking, accounting and real estate,” he says.

      What Are the Benefits of Automation?

      The use of robots and artificial intelligence can result in:

      • improved operational efficiency and productivity,
      • cost savings in manufacturing and service,
      • better customer personalization online,
      • increased safety and
      • less tedious work.

      “Just about every business has services or repetitive processes that could benefit from automation,” says Leonard Callejo, director of online marketing at Cisco Webex, a web and videoconferencing software company with a large remote workforce.

      “It’s not just about robotics—it’s about using technology to augment humans and improve their productivity or performance in their occupations,” continues Callejo. “Automation has impacted Cisco in a positive way, greatly improving the productivity of our employees in the way they work and collaborate. This enables workers to focus on higher value tasks and perform at higher levels.”

      How Automation Will Change Business

      Over the next several years as AI and robotics become a business mainstay, a wide variety of changes will ensue. Here are five ways running a company will change in response to automation.

      1. Change in operations focus.

      “The future of automation involves technology that optimizes the end-to-end supply chain from the company’s suppliers through to its customers,” says Ali Raza, founder and CEO of ThroughPut, an operations AI company focused on preventing workflow bottlenecks. 

      “Organizational focus will shift from getting products to customers faster than the competition, versus at the best prices. This will result in industrial companies moving from being price-centric to velocity-centric,” says Raza.

      Such a shift has occurred in response to automation at Hausera, a kitchen and bathroom plumbing supply company.

      “One of the biggest changes automation has made at Hausera is the fact that we're much closer to a just-in-time supply chain than ever before,” says Hausera’s founder Sean Hayes. “Automation has allowed our warehouses and distribution centers and industry partners and vendors to get products into consumers' hands with little to no delay from the time an order is placed.”

      2. Robots will become “co-workers.”

      “Today’s robots are working right next to line workers and learning from them,” says <a href="http://www.tbjones.com/" rel="nofollow">Terry Jones, founder of Travelocity.com and author of Disruption OFF.

      “Robots are now multipurpose and can be trained for a task by just repeating it, not [by] being programmed,” continues Jones. “Additionally, robots are performing dangerous tasks, so we don’t have to, like cleaning massive oil tanks, inspecting pipelines or helping first responders.”

      3. Better customer service will be possible.

      “In the near future, many of the hardest parts of business operations will be handled by machines, leaving business owners and their staff to focus on taking care of customers,” says Hayes. “Many back-office functions can be turned over to a machine with little disruption, freeing up resources that would be better used in marketing or customer service roles.”

      4. Knowledge workers will be greatly affected.

      Individuals who “think” for a living, such as computer programmers, engineers, scientists, lawyers and communication experts, will feel the most change with automation initially, believes Hugh Dyar, senior vice-president of marketing for Sapience Analytics, an analytics company.

      The takeaway for automation strategy is not when to automate, but where to automate. The first step involves streamlining processes and bringing them into control, at which point they’re easier to scale.

      —Ali Raza, founder and CEO, ThroughPut

      “The emergence of robotic process automation (RPA) has automated mundane, repetitive, predictable tasks, allowing knowledge workers to focus on higher value work,” continues Dyar. “These mundane tasks that will be automated include complex, but predictable activities, from monitoring the health of networks servers to simpler activities such as transcribing prescriptions. The impact is pervasive and will affect all industries.”

      5. Online operations will be the first to transform.

      “Online services will change the most in the next few years as a result of automation,” says Raviraj Hegde, head of growth for Donorbox, a donation platform for nonprofits.

      “Small-business owners who run their own fabrication workshops, for instance, would need to hire automation specialists to design robotic equipment for them,” says Hegde. “On the other hand, a website that wants to streamline its operations can hire a single coder.”

      Preparing for Automation

      To prepare your company for the changes ahead, it’s a good idea to examine your existing processes and workflows to see which ones would benefit from automation.

      “The takeaway for automation strategy is not when to automate, but where to automate,” says Raza. “The first step involves streamlining processes and bringing them into control, at which point they’re easier to scale.”

      Before businesses adopt process automation, it’s a good idea to figure out what tasks to automate, agrees Dyar.

      “That decision should be based on the value and the cost of the tasks. Look at workflow to identify processes that are labor intensive and determine the parts of those processes that drive the most cost.”

      Read more articles on industry trends.

      Photo: Getty Images

       

       

      American Express Business Class Logo
      Share This Story
      Email Icon
      Facebook Icon
      Twitter Icon
      LinkedIn Icon

      Published: March 04, 2020

      Updated: October 02, 2024


      Want to Dig Deeper?


      Trending Content