Workplace Automation

The potential of artificial intelligence and advanced robotics to perform tasks once reserved for humans is no longer reserved for spectacular demonstrations by the likes of IBM’s Watson, Rethink Robotics’ Baxter, DeepMind, or Google’s driverless car. Just head to an airport: automated check-in kiosks now dominate many airlines’ ticketing areas. Pilots actively steer aircraft for just three to seven minutes of many flights, with autopilot guiding the rest of the journey. Passport-control processes at some airports can place more emphasis on scanning document bar codes than on observing incoming passengers.

What will be the impact of automation efforts like these, multiplied many times across different sectors of the economy? Can we look forward to vast improvements in productivity, freedom from boring work, and improved quality of life? Should we fear threats to jobs, disruptions to organisations, and strains on the social fabric?

Very few occupations will be automated in their entirety in the near or medium term. Rather, certain activities are more likely to be automated, requiring entire business processes to be transformed, and jobs performed by people to be redefined, much like the bank teller’s job was redefined with the advent of ATMs. Although we often think of automation primarily affecting low-skill, low-wage roles, even the highest paid occupations in the economy, such as financial managers, physicians, and senior executives, including CEOs, have a significant amount of activity that can be automated. The opportunities extend far beyond labor savings. The magnitude of those benefits suggests that the ability to staff, manage, and lead increasingly automated organisations will become an important competitive differentiator. It is imperative therefore that leaders from the C-suite to the front line will need to redefine jobs and processes so that their organisations can take advantage of the automation potential that is distributed across them.

AutomationFrancesca Tabor