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Robotic Process Automation with Blue Prism Quick Start Guide

You're reading from   Robotic Process Automation with Blue Prism Quick Start Guide Create software robots and automate business processes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789610444
Length 232 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Lim Mei Ying Lim Mei Ying
Author Profile Icon Lim Mei Ying
Lim Mei Ying
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Case for Robotic Process Automation 2. Building the First Blue Prism Process FREE CHAPTER 3. Pages, Data Items, Blocks, Collections, and Loops 4. Actions, Decisions, Choices, and Calculations 5. Implementing Business Objects 6. Spying Elements 7. Write, Wait, and Read 8. Working with Excel 9. Sending and Receiving Emails 10. Control Room and Work Queues 11. Exception Handling 12. Other Books You May Enjoy

What is robotic process automation?

In recent times, RPA's popularity has been on the rise. The main selling point for the adoption of a robotic workforce is the reduction in cost. Given the right processes, a trained robot can mimic the same function as its human counterpart. It does not sleep, go on vacations, or take sick leave. It does not complain about overtime or require a heart-to-heart chat over performance evaluations. The cost of maintaining a robot is generally cheaper than hiring a human employee. In addition, the robot can perform repetitive tasks, freeing up the human to take on more value-added work.

Robotic process automation is a software robot. You won't actually see a physical machine with arms, legs, and wheels tapping away on a keyboard. With the help of a software program, a robot trainer records keystrokes and mouse clicks. These actions are replayed by a computer (the robot) to mimic the actions of a human.

For example, perhaps the trainer would like the robot to scan a shopping site to purchase weekly groceries.

As a human, these are the steps that he would take to purchase a box of cereal:

  1. Visit his favorite shopping site: http://www.amazon.com
  2. Enter the name of the cereal into the search box and click the Search button
  3. Pick out the box of cereal that he wants to buy

The robot would perform the same task in the following way:

  1. Open the browser with the start address of http://www.amazon.com.
  2. Identify the location of the Search box. Send keystrokes to key in the name of the cereal.
  3. Identify the location of the Search button. Press the button.
  4. Identify the location of the search results.
  5. Based on a pre-determined algorithm, click on the desired item in the list, for example, it could simply be the first search result on the list.

The robot will store all these instructions within the software program. When requested, it will repeat what it was told to key in and enter step-by-step. It is for this reason that processes selected for robotic automation have to be repeatable.

There is no inherent intelligence. It will do exactly what the trainer tells it to do. The robot will not be able to see that there is an ongoing promotion from Shop B where they sell two boxes for the price of three. It will always pick the first item in the search results. Similarly, if the cereal has been discontinued by the manufacturer, the robot will faithfully try to search for it and purchase it. It won't automatically switch to an alternative flavor or brand. There are advances in the industry to add cognitive intelligence to RPA robots. Algorithms such as natural language processing, text analytics, and data mining are used together with RPA to produce robots that are able to respond to situations intelligently and not just based on what it has been told to do by the trainer. However, these are still emerging technologies. The kind of automation that robots do in RPA are usually the repeatable type that has predictable inputs and outputs.

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