{"id":4009,"date":"2021-06-25T10:23:43","date_gmt":"2021-06-25T14:23:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/iesmartsystems.com\/?p=4009"},"modified":"2021-07-02T10:38:17","modified_gmt":"2021-07-02T14:38:17","slug":"office-automation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/iesmartsystems.com\/office-automation\/","title":{"rendered":"The Basics Of Office Automation"},"content":{"rendered":"
Whatever your feelings about a possible takeover by robotic overlords, let\u2019s set the record straight on office automation systems: many businesses are already doing it at some level, but lack a cohesive strategy. Any time you integrate manual processes with computer processes in order to reduce manual labor you\u2019re doing the work of office automation. If your staff is empowered to reduce waste, optimize workflow, and adopt new processes, it\u2019s likely that you\u2019re already well on the road to a highly automated office.<\/p>\n
What you may lack is a business processes management role, someone who oversees the automation and integration effort. They work across departments and vendors, looking for ways to accommodate everyone\u2019s needs with the simplest software configuration possible.<\/p>\n
That\u2019s because office automation can lend itself to software bloat, with everyone using disparate systems that don\u2019t talk to each other, wasting resources on unproductive redundancy.<\/p>\n
Many vendors who post blogs about office automation propose techno-utopian solutions where menial labor is reduced to bits and bytes, machine learning eliminates waste, and physical paper is a distant memory. It may sound glorious at first, but when office automation becomes an exercise in radical digitization and tech adoption, you may feel disappointed in the results.<\/p>\n<\/div>
Office automation is about using computer systems to do what they do best, and freeing people to focus on what they do best. You want to identify the manual processes that, if automated, would reduce or simplify workloads and reduce errors. 78% of business leaders estimate that automation of manual tasks could save employees 3 hours a day.<\/p>\n<\/div>
The benefits of office automation include:<\/p>\n
Sharing documents in the cloud is an example of simplifying a process where accuracy and speed are important, and where physical paper becomes a burden. Legal and compliance documents tend to belong, share much of the same language from case to case, and demand a high degree of consistency and accuracy. While some clients may cling to the need for ink signatures on real paper, that\u2019s becoming a thing of the past.<\/p>\n<\/div>
When clients or internal stakeholders initiate a support or service request, it’s best if they do so in an automated system that can generate a ticket and assign it to the right person and make sure it gets fulfilled according to your service-level agreements. Many IT departments live and die by their support ticket systems, but this is a workflow that can be adapted to a variety of departments and roles.<\/p>\n<\/div>
Once upon a time, Rolodex was synonymous with customer-relationship management (CRM). Today companies have the opportunity to capture and use more data on a single customer than would ever fit on a Rolodex card. Ideally, you want a system that works from the moment a phone call or email comes in and keeps track of relevant data for the entire life of the client. As data portability regulations (such as the California Consumer Privacy Act) gain momentum, CRM will carry a heavier burden when it comes to managing consumers\u2019 data \u2014 not something that any human wants to do by hand.<\/p>\n<\/div>
If you\u2019ve never heard of an integrated workplace management system (IWMS), this blog is a good place to start. In short, the principle of an IWMS is to tie together the various aspects of your physical building, such as security access, HVAC, and utilities into a single piece of software that allows you to see the building from a data perspective. If integrated into your overall office automation strategy, an IWMS could help when onboarding a new employee, triggering a ticket for facilities to set up a new desk, IT to set up a computer and phone, and security to issue a new ID card.<\/p>\n<\/div>
Remote work has put a renewed focus on office automation. Many physical processes that few people dreamed of doing over a computer, such as banking, healthcare, and grocery shopping have gone digital (thanks coronavirus). Businesses have turned the challenge into an opportunity and many office workers have left the corporate office building for good, content to work from home.<\/p>\n<\/div>
This trend demands that anything that can be done digitally, be done digitally. Meetings are a good example. Pre-2020, it wasn\u2019t uncommon for a meeting room to include an\u00a0internet-ready projector and camera<\/a>, now this equipment is essential. Business travel has been \u201cautomated\u201d into a Zoom meeting (at least in some cases). Collaborating on a project must happen in the cloud, with people in different geographic locations contributing virtually.<\/p>\n<\/div> At the heart of any office automation effort is software and devices that are capable of running it, also known as the Internet of Things (IoT).<\/p>\n<\/div> In its simplest form, using Microsoft Office 365 and OneDrive allows your team to automate the work of collaborating on documents. Slack, Jira, Monday.com, Zapier, Trello, Zendesk, Asana, Salesforce\u2026 the list of software tools that can help you automate daily processes is enormous.<\/p>\n Even though you may discover a few applications that form the pillars of your business\u2019s work, the operative term to remember is \u201cintegration.\u201d If a datum can\u2019t easily pass across your software ecosystem, then you\u2019ve got a fly in the automation ointment. This is where your business process manager should step in and access the needs of each party and hopefully come up with a solution to keep data flowing and processes working\u00a0automatically.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div> Connecting ordinary devices is both a benefit and a challenge. When your lighting fixtures connect to the internet, it\u2019s dead simple to flip the virtual switch from your smartphone. Alternately, if your all-in-one copier gets hacked and someone steals sensitive documents, you\u2019ve got a real problem. Worst still if someone is able to hack an essential system and shut it down remotely, it will disrupt your business and cost you thousands if not millions of dollars.<\/p>\n Recent examples of the risks of introducing more internet-connected devices into your organization can be seen in the cyber-attacks that shut down the\u00a0Colonial pipeline<\/a>\u00a0and the\u00a0meat producer JBS<\/a>.<\/p>\n The lesson here isn\u2019t to simply reject IoT and an internet-connected workplace. Rather you should deploy a full-time cybersecurity team to monitor, and maintain your IoT systems as part of your larger IT ecosystem. This also starts by partnering with the right vendor to install\u00a0secure systems<\/a>\u00a0and make sure they work seamlessly with the rest of your automated, networked, distributed organization.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><\/div><\/div> i.e.Smart Systems is a Houston, TX based technology integration partner that specializes in design and installation of audio\/visual technology and structured cabling. For more than three decades, our team of in-house experts has partnered with business owners, architectural firms, general contractors, construction managers, real estate developers, and designers in the Houston market, to deliver reliable, scalable solutions that align with their unique goals.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div>Office Automation Tools<\/h2><\/div>
Software<\/h3><\/div>
IoT Devices<\/h3><\/div>
About i.e.Smart Systems<\/h4><\/div>