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Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Combine the Skills of Your RPA Developers and Data Scientists

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Imagine you’re a chief financial officer (CFO), and the next quarter is about to start. The previous quarter was good, but your gut says the next quarter will be better.

 

In a perfect world, you’d shift from an instinctual optimism to a data-backed prediction. You’d know from day one how much money your department will have on hand by the end of the quarter. You’d know exactly what you can budget for and what resources you can dedicate in the next quarter.

 

By combining the predictive capabilities of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) with automation, you can bring this high value information to your fingertips. However, there exists a divide: the two teams that can tackle these complex data challenges typically don’t work together. I’m talking about your robotic process automation (RPA) developers and your data scientists.

The skill sets of your data scientists and RPA developers are complementary. With the right governance, you can configure new workflows that leverage both. When you do, you can scale ML faster, free up your data scientists for more complex work, skill up RPA developers, and make full use of both teams regarding business outcomes. The first challenge to take on is freeing your data scientists from their silos.

Data scientists are isolated in silos

To practically introduce AI in the enterprise and transform your organization with automation, getting the RPA developer and data scientist teams together is key. Silos aren’t uncommon, especially in large enterprises, but getting these two particular teams together is one of the most impactful changes you can make. Both teams want to help inform better, smarter processes and business decisions, but that doesn’t mean they work together. There tends to exist an organizational gap between the teams that causes them to use unnecessarily separate means to get to similar destinations.

 

Under-using your data scientists can waste significant time and resources. Glassdoor reports that the average data scientist salary in the United States is $113,309. Beyond sheer salary, there’s opportunity cost to wasting your data scientists, too.


There’s currently a shortage of data scientists, so if you have a team, it’s best to use them to their fullest potential. Unfortunately, these rare, expensive unicorns are often misunderstood both by the organizations that employ them and by the RPA teams they could be working with.

Why companies often misunderstand data scientists

There are four main reasons companies underestimate the value of data scientists:

  1. Their business value is hard to articulate. According to a 2020 Anaconda Data Science survey, fewer than half (48%) of data scientists feel they can demonstrate the impact of data science on business outcomes.
  2. ROI is expensive. Data scientists—who are already expensive—often need more resources than companies are willing to invest. Our own Jeremy Tederry, a machine learning Product Manager at UiPath and a former data scientist, once left a company because it didn’t have the resource to get a ML model into production. 
  3. Their work doesn’t deliver value without collaboration. Getting data science outputs into production, where they can impact a business, isn’t always straightforward. Data scientists need cross-organizational support to succeed. According to Tederry, “ML models alone can’t, and don’t, do anything—they must work in conjunction with other teams and be included as a part of a larger project to be successful.”
  4. Much of their effort goes toward invisible work. According to the data science survey from Anaconda we mentioned above, 45% of data scientists spend their time preparing data (loading and cleansing) before it goes into a data model or visualization. This can be immensely frustrating for data scientists (as evident in the tweet below).

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Source

 

When these four reasons combine, companies tend to underestimate and underutilize their data scientists. Little do they know, however, that unlocking their value is just one team away.

RPA developers misunderstand data scientists, too

The mindsets of RPA developers and data scientists tend to be different because they have different workflows and different timelines. When your workflow diverges, your mindset will too. This is natural, but it also makes it difficult for these teams to communicate across departments, creating silos.

 

Trung Nguyen, data scientist at MSD, provides a good example. In an article on intelligent automation, he breaks down RPA and ML workflows into distinct charts, which you can see below. Look, in particular, at how the RPA developer focuses on writing rules, whereas the data scientist focuses on training ML models.

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Both teams start by studying, and both will evaluate, launch, and analyze the errors in their solutions. After that, the RPA developer typically shifts their strategy once they encounter environmental changes, whereas data scientists typically funnel feedback into data that further trains their ML models.

 

This might seem like a small difference at first glance, but the differences cascade once you zoom out and look at timelines.

 

The time horizon for complex problem solving—the kind data scientists are best suited to tackle—is at least six months. RPA developers instead tend to use agile workflows, measuring progress in terms of weeks. This means RPA developers, immersed in these faster workflows, tend to think in terms of quick solutions, whereas data scientists tend to drift toward more exploratory projects.

RPA developer and data scientist skill sets: different but complementary

When leaders align RPA developers and data scientists, the benefits they can deliver to the organizations are greater than the sum of their parts. An RPA developer can automate a lot more complex processes working with a data scientist than they can working alone, and a data scientist working with an RPA developer can work faster and focus better than ever before.

 

Despite the gap we’ve described, RPA developers and data scientists speak the same language—or at least code it.

 

The UiPath State of RPA Developers Report 2020 shows that more than 90% of RPA developers have a college degree and that Python is already one of the top languages known to RPA developers. The knowledge gap isn’t as wide as you might fear.

 

There’s a desire to cross this gap too. In our research, RPA developers are already indicating they want to learn more about data science–adjacent topics. In the UiPath The Impact of RPA on Employee Experience, more than 80% of RPA developers indicated they wanted to learn about AI/ML. And in the UiPath State of RPA Developers Report 2020, several RPA developers said that in addition to RPA, they wanted to add ML and data science skill sets.

 

It’s not like the gap is invisible to data scientists either. Research shows that data scientists spend almost half their time on problems that RPA developers can solve better and faster. Remember (according to the 2020 Anaconda Data Science Survey we cited above), on average, 45% of their time was spent getting data ready before they could use it to develop models and visualizations.

 

Let’s sum this up:

  1. RPA developers and data scientists can communicate in a common language.
  2. RPA developers want to learn about and implement data science.
  3. Data scientists are often stuck doing work RPA developers could be helping with.

So that leaves us with a question: how can we put these clearly complementary teams together?

Breaking down the wall between data science and RPA teams

If leaders can break down the barriers between these teams, they can unlock massive opportunities for their companies. To do so, leaders must enable data scientists to communicate their needs to RPA developers and coordinate both teams to achieve greater outcomes on complex problems.

Leaders can facilitate collaboration

Smart organizations put a C-suite-level leader in charge of both teams. In our case study with Heritage Bank, David Johnston, Manager of Intelligent Automation and Process Excellence, said, “Data science and automation teams are often disconnected. In our organization, however, both of those teams report to our CFO.” This was a huge part of the reason Heritage Bank, working with UiPath, could achieve 98% accuracy across their most recent ML models. 

 

While that may not be always feasible and if organizational reporting structures are different, respective leaders can ensure that both teams talk to each other and that the communication is truly bidirectional. To facilitate that level of collaboration, leaders can promote high-value use cases that emphasize the benefits of both teams working together. Creativity is imperative. As we explained, there’s a shortage of data scientists, so smart leaders will find new ways to source data scientist hires and upskill RPA developers to take on data science-adjacent work in their stead.

RPA developers can help data scientists

When data scientists have a problem, RPA developers can come to the rescue.

 

Inside Big Data points out two major problems data scientists tend to have:

  1. Data scientists tend not to have enough labeled training data to teach their learning models.
  2. Data scientists tend to have to use theoretical data from sandbox datasets instead of data from real use cases.

This is where RPA developers come in. RPA developers can benefit data scientists by:

  • Creating metadata: Software robots, especially when complemented with process mining, leave trails of data as they complete tasks, making processes more understandable for data scientists.
  • Accessing legacy systems: Software robots work with legacy systems and make accessible the data that used to be trapped in old tools.
  • Making data usable: RPA developers can decompose big data sets into usable components and organize, label, and clean disparate pieces of data into a coherent whole.
  • Implementing ready-made AI modules: Many ML and AI use cases aren’t novel, and instead of data scientists building models from scratch, RPA developers can deploy pre-existing modules.
  • Using AutoML to save time: RPA developers can use AutoML to find which predictive model is the most accurate, ensuring data scientists don’t have to make and test multiple models for a given use case. This frees data scientists to work on more challenging tasks.

These benefits combined not only make the lives of data scientists either but also help them accomplish more than they could previously. RPA developers enable data scientists to do their jobs faster and better, as well as make the final solution easier to deploy.

UiPath can help your data scientists and RPA developers reach new heights—together

The goal of a forward-thinking enterprise isn’t to find a compromise between the two often divergent teams; it’s to realign them both so that they can accomplish more together than they could apart. Data science needs accurate, clean, and verified data. RPA processes produce clean data and often start with data that’s messy and unstructured.

 

Without the right tool set that surfaces data about business processes and automation workflows, even the best leader will struggle to make the two teams work together. The UiPath Platform provides the tools companies need to unite their data science and RPA teams.

 

UiPath can help data scientists:

  • Create software robots that gather data into one consolidated place
  • Deliver the “last mile” of MLOps with UiPath AI Fabric and deploy models into production
  • Prove the ROI for the models they build, better allowing them to focus the majority of time on exploring data and refining models that solve real-world problems
  • Leverage out-of-box AI solutions like UiPath Document Understanding and AI Document Understanding

UiPath helps RPA developers:

  • Quickly test and deploy AI models
  • Use out-of-the-box AI models so that data scientists don’t have to build any from scratch and can remain focused on novel problems and solutions
  • Use AutoML capabilities with drag-and-drop ease using AI Fabric
  • Deploy reusable RPA components, including ML, with the UiPath Marketplace

Let’s think through one last example: if your company wants to start using sentiment analysis, your RPA developers can implement one of our starter models and give it the data it needs to work. If your company then wants to make the sentiment analysis more accurate and more robust—or otherwise tweak the given algorithms—then you need a data scientist.

 

Another way to think of it is that if you’re using math to solve a problem, that’s the RPA developer’s role; if you’re trying to figure out the math, that’s the data scientist’s role. UiPath provides a platform that includes both types of work.

 

Your company can do so much more than you’ve imagined, once you combine data science and RPA. UiPath AI Fabric enables you––whether you have a data science background or not––to drag and drop AI right into your business processes. To get a hands-on perspective, try a trial for UiPath AI Fabric today.

 

Join AI leaders and UiPath experts at the UiPath AI Summit!

The virtual event will be held over four weeks, starting February 24, 2021. Whether you’re new to AI or an experienced AI practitioner looking to supercharge your robots, there’s a session for you.





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