HFS has repeatedly declared robotic process engineering (RPA) dead, even before UiPath hit the big time with its funding rounds and IPO. Suffice it to say the suggestion was not to pronounce RPA dead but to highlight that broader innovative technologies delivered as an integrated platform were required to progress to end-to-end process automation.
The market has moved on from those giddy heights, and RPA vendors are looking for new ways to keep the proposition relevant. When UiPath struggled to justify its irrational market capitalization, it moved beyond its RPA centricity and “one bot for every employee” postulation by repositioning around an enterprise automation platform. Yet, even that was not enough to placate investors, resulting in Daniel Dines returning as CEO to try and chart a new direction for the company. HFS caught up with its management at the London UiPath on Tour event.
The event’s focal point was not the details of UiPath’s roadmap but the return of its founder as CEO and a new corporate positioning. The return of Daniel Dines should be seen as a reflection of investors’ unhappiness with the company’s sluggish performance at a time when the market is in overdrive on all things AI. Thus, probably unsurprisingly, UiPath is going all in on agentic process automation as its new North Star.
Daniel defines agentic as “the ability of an AI system to design and control the flow of a business process.” He expects a future where agents do 80% of the work, with humans doing 20%, primarily focused on supervision and exception handling. The broader context is, as executives put it, the emergence of GenAI provides an opportunity to rethink end-to-end process automation. Therefore, for HFS, the strategic questions are: how do we finally progress to end-to-end automation, what role can AI play on that journey, and will RPA remain a relevant proposition?
Source: UiPath, 2024
Many of these AI discussions are squarely playing to the investors’ gallery. By strongly leading with North Star topics such as large action models, autonomous decision-making, and adaptive behavior, as Exhibit 1 depicts, UiPath might get some breathing space while re-assessing its go-to-market strategy and overhauling the automation narrative. But it needs to define its role in this brave new world.
We didn’t hear much about technology, process, and cultural debt. Overcoming that is the critical value proposition of RPA. We listened to a great deal of talk about agentic models but little about how robots and agents collaborate. The crossover between the two concepts will be an increasingly busy segment as many ISVs are zeroing in on workflow orchestration. Here, UiPath will be locking horns with the likes of ServiceNow, Salesforce, Workato, Camunda, and many more.
The more important thing for UiPath is to articulate the “why” of the Golden Circle model. What is your purpose, your motivation, and what do you believe? And here, UiPath has to double-click when driving its new narrative by leading with outcomes rather than technology and capabilities.
We are very early on the journey toward agentic automation. There is much education and learning required from the early deployments. However, we should try to learn from the journeys of RPA and, consequently, intelligent automation. Here are the issues on our minds:
It is fascinating that, just as with the early days of automation, executives point to a seminal study by McKinsey highlighting the opportunities with AI. Yet both those reports also discuss the potential disruptions in great detail. Therefore, the answers to many questions on automation and AI are in the eye of the beholder.
The world of RPA is mainly deterministic, often even static. Thus, any suggestions that agentic automation could be largely non-deterministic outline the fundamental change this would bring to organizations. That’s why we need to better understand how to operationalize these innovations. That includes articulating the “why.” How do we prepare organizations to take advantage of innovations such as agentic process automation? This is not about capabilities but about change and outcomes.
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