What does automation mean for G&A and the back office?
By
incorporating available technologies, redeploying employees and reimagining
processes, companies can dramatically increase performance and greatly reduce
costs.
The performance of general and administrative
(G&A) functions varies dramatically among companies, and the differential
is poised to widen. As new forms of automation—fueled by advances in areas such
as robotics and artificial intelligence—transform the world of work, G&A
functions will be transformed, too.
Some of the impact will
show up in costs. Top-quartile companies
operate at nearly half the cost of their bottom-quartile counterparts in the
same sector. Those cost differentials will grow with the increasing use of
automation.
Just as important,
automation brings with it the potential to improve the quality, speed, and
flexibility of work dramatically—and this is where some of the most exciting
opportunities in G&A reside. Successful G&A-improvement programs, which
in our experience can generate twice as much impact from gains in effectiveness
as from increased efficiency, not only improve decision making and the
allocation of resources but also help employees to work more effectively. As
the pace of automation accelerates, the opportunities for improving performance
will only increase.
Technical possibilities
McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) research suggests that companies can automate at least 30 percent of the activities in about 60
percent of all occupations by using technologies available today. These
findings are consistent with what we’ve seen in the G&A functions of many companies.
For example, about 20 percent of the tasks of a typical finance unit’s
record-to-report (R2R) process are fully automatable (requiring no human
intervention) and nearly 50 percent are mostly so (with technology undertaking
most of the work). Similarly, in the HR hire-to-retire (H2R) process, about 30
percent of all tasks can be fully automated and another 30 percent mostly
automated.
As the cost of
technology falls and its capabilities grow in areas such as robotic process
automation, machine learning, and natural-language generation, the economic
case for automation is improving rapidly. A major financial institution
recently found that it made economic sense to automate nearly 35 percent of
finance-function tasks right now. The technology to automate another 35 percent
of tasks—though not in a remunerative way—was technically feasible.
Strategic potential
What those automation
figures fail to reflect are the possibilities created by reimagining business
processes. Assigning machines to handle discrete tasks and plugging new
technologies into existing processes may generate savings, but they won’t take
advantage of automation’s potential to elevate your G&A function into a
more strategic asset. That requires redesigning processes and organizational structures
around both current and anticipated automation technologies.
Of course, sustaining G&A improvements has always forced companies to get things done in
new ways, to reconfigure roles, and to adapt the workplace culture. But the
changes are likely to be bigger for large-scale automation efforts. Consider
the experience of a global insurance firm that used a set of automation
technologies to redesign an overwhelmingly manual and error-prone process. At
any given time, tens of thousands of policies were held up as a result of
exceptions, and management faced mounting pressure from regulators to meet
mandated deadlines. More than 30 employees were tasked with working the
backlog, and it took about five to seven minutes to bring each policy out of
limbo.
Robotic process
automation provided a way out of this logjam, as high-performing employees were
redeployed to more valuable work. The automated process virtually eliminated
errors, cut processing time by 50 percent, and reduced costs by even more. The
new, automated process also proved highly scalable.
Another major financial
institution, already long established as an industry leader in efficiency,
embarked on a rapid program to incorporate automation technologies—such as
robotic process automation and natural-language generation—into its processes.
Taking advantage of existing market-ready innovations, the company launched
use-case pilots to validate new opportunities and build out the necessary
capabilities. Even more significantly, rather than just considering how to
apply innovations to existing steps of traditional workflows, the company
realized that it could reap the greatest benefits by redesigning existing
processes—grouping automatable tasks, eliminating handoffs, and resequencing
approvals to get the most out of automation. That resulted in a wholly novel
model, which drove game-changing performance and efficiency improvements. A
reimagined regulatory reporting process, for example, made it possible to
complete, in as little as an hour, steps that had previously taken a week .
Into the future
Companies understand
that getting started is the easy part; a small centralized team, with help from
third parties, can build a few bots or algorithms. But scaling is hard. One way
to keep the momentum going after demonstrating early success is to support
automation efforts across functions and lines of business by establishing centers
of excellence (COE). Effective ones create user-friendly playbooks, contribute
advanced expertise, build business cases, manage vendor relationships, track
the impact of changes, and develop new capabilities. By working with the
business to execute organizational change, maintain automation solutions, and
manage risks, the most successful of these units also ensure that automation
has a real impact.
One of the biggest
risks of automation is demotivating or frightening the people your organization
must mobilize to compete effectively. Some of the fears are misplaced: humans
are needed to build bots and to “teach” artificial-intelligence platforms how
to perform their tasks, some of which will always require the active
involvement of humans. Critically important social, emotional, and creative
capabilities, for example, are difficult to automate. Bots can’t persuade a
leader to run a business unit in a different way or design a new
human-resources strategy with millennials in mind.
But automation, if
implemented effectively, will inevitably lead to changes in organizational
structures, to redefined roles—and, sometimes, to redundancies. There’s no
point in pretending these realities don’t exist or trying to hide an automation
program behind closed doors. Honesty and transparency are critical. So is a
commitment from top management to pursue, as part of any automation effort,
initiatives that will benefit employees by eliminating routine work they don’t
enjoy, creating opportunities for them to acquire new and increasingly
important technical skills, and using the proceeds of automation to fund roles
that support the business in exciting new ways. Finally, it’s imperative to be
open, from the outset, about how you will treat employees who no longer have a
role in the organization.
None of this is easy,
but the alternative—being caught flat footed as competitors gain an edge
through automation—is a risk that’s not worth taking. Automation at its best
can help companies to uncover entirely new ways of executing traditional
processes and radically new possibilities for operating more quickly,
efficiently, and effectively. That makes automation a strategic imperative for
G&A functions. The top-quartile companies of tomorrow will be the companies
that start the journey today.
By Alexander Edlich, Allison Watson, and Rob
Whiteman
http://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/operations/our-insights/what-does-automation-mean-for-ga-and-the-back-office?cid=other-eml-alt-mkq-mck-oth-1706&hlkid=2318ea29827a4dcb97da159cff33944d&hctky=1627601&hdpid=8bee0c48-94d4-4419-b021-ac5f23a268eb
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