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Hyperautomation - The next frontier

RPA had been launched in the late 1950s, with the development of ML by Arthur Samuel (1959). In its nascent stage, RPA was a standalone concept of virtual workforce with specific application areas and pre-defined capabilities. However, rules were just not enough to justify the raging requirements of the real world. To sustain and grow in the age of Industrial Revolution 4.0, the very concept needed an innovative jolt.

What is hyperautomation?

Hyperautomation refers to a combination of complementary sets of tools that can integrate functional and process silos to automate and augment business processes. Hyperautomation brings together several components of process automation, integrating tools and technologies that amplify the overall ability to automate business processes.

 

Simple and agile

Hyperautomation does not just refer to implementing tools to manage tasks. It also requires collaboration amongst humans who are decision-makers, and can use technology to interpret data and apply logic.

What is in it

This report outlines the details around the concept of hyperautomation. It details the technology’s history and origin, its standard definition, key components and fundamentals, comparisons, market value, and forecasts. The report helps readers in intercepting the right set of information about the relatively new technology, and its advantages and limitations, along with an overview of the peripheral technology spectrum it involves

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