Friday, November 5, 2010

What People Should Understand If They Are Considering IT Automation

We are living in an era of unprecedented change. Change brought on primarily by the advances of the technological age. Nowhere is this more evident than in the domain of business. Internet Technology (IT) has become a driving force behind successful business practices. As a result, there is an imminent need for an IT system that inherently adapts to rapid change. IT Automation presents a viable Solution.

Adaptability is a 21st century survival skill for all organizations. IT automation will make it possible for business organizations to adapt to constantly evolving technologies. Within this paradigm, shifts in the marketplace, emerging competitors and changes in customer behavior will be identified ahead of the curve, creating a razors edge advantage. This process will translate into all areas of business, including cascading mergers and acquisitions. When we talk of increased agility, it means that business processes and rules can be changed constantly. It also means finding new ways of leveraging new information types which might involve more complex combinations than the existing ones.

IT automation shall also need a constant feed of the ever changing data of the present, should be capable of extracting and recognizing data from legacy applications and metadata. The automation shall also need to sort the constant and ever-increasing data flow of the world in real-time for future reference. Given what we have witnessed over the last decade, it would be impossible to argue that current systems will maintain the status quo for any length of time. Technology only lasts as long as a new technology is developed, which has pretty much been at warp speed. As our Grandparents could not conceive of the concept of airplane travel, so too, we cannot imagine the technological advances that will evolve in the future. Web services have enabled most of us to collect new types of data from within and without an organization. Companies have significantly improved data collection methods, with RFID promising even higher levels of real time data transfers. This improvement, however, has generated a new set of challenges in integration, collections, filtering and deciphering. With all these apparent challenges it should be clear that remaining static on the current systems is not the way to the future. This is why many IT departments are challenged to react. What with the companies resources being too stretched to adapt fast. Such overworked IT departments only find consolation in shifting most of the burden to existing systems with people offering direction only. IT automation is not just another fancy word for the distant future. Automation itself sounds frightening to human existence! The need of the hour is to reassess the present working system. Any organization planning to go for automation needs to clearly lay down the rules and definition for its each and every department. It will be similar to the present goal setting done for each employee at the beginning of every year. Examples cannot be copied but can be the basis of urgent brainstorming session of the employers. It is just like William Gibson says, The future is here. Its just not widely distributed yet.

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