For organizations who are still wedded to the rules and structures of robotic process automation (RPA), then considering agentic AI as the next step for automation may be faintly terrifying. SS&C Blue Prism, however, is here to help, taking customers on the journey from RPA to agentic automation at a pace with which theyβre comfortable.
Big as it may be, this move is a necessary one. Modern workflows are at a level of complexity that outlines what traditional RPA was designed to do, according to Steven Colquitt, VP Software Engineering, SS&C Blue Prism. Unstructured data comes from various sources resembling non-deterministic real-world interactions. βInputs can vary, outcomes can shift and decisions depend on context in real-time,β notes Colquitt.
Brian Halpin, Managing Director, Automation, SS&C Blue Prism, gives the example of a credit agreement where you might need to get 30 or 40 answers from it. He uses the word βanswersβ deliberately as opposed to data points to account for the level of reasoning that a large language model (LLM) performs.
The element of this being a journey continues to resonate, however. βWeβre now saying weβre giving an AI agent the outcome that we want, but weβre not giving it the instructions on how to complete,β says Halpin. βWeβre not saying, βfollow step one, two, three, four, five.β Weβre saying, βI want this loan reviewedβ or βI want this customer onboarded.β
βUltimately, I think thatβs where the market will go,β adds Halpin. βIs it ready for that? No. Why? Because thereβs trust, thereβs regulations, thereβs auditability [β¦] stability, security. We know LLMs are prone to hallucinations, we know they drift, and [if] you change the underlying model, things change and responses get different.
βThereβs an awful lot of learning to happen before I think companies go fully autonomous and real agentic workflows [are] driven from that sort of non-deterministic perspective,β says Halpin. βBut then, there will be something else, right? There will be another model. So really, it is all a journey right now.β
SS&C Blue Prism has thousands of customers who have automated processes in place, from centers of excellence (CoEs) to running digital workers in their operations, who theyβre hoping to upgrade into the βworld of AIβ, as Halpin puts it. Sometimes itβs about connecting two separate areas.
βItβs been interesting,β Halpin notes. βAs I talk to [our] customers, I see a common thread among companies right now where, in a lot of cases, AI has been established as a separate unit in a company. You go over to the process automation team, and theyβre maybe not even allowed to use the AI.
βSo, itβs about, βHow do you help them get that capability and blend it into their process efficiency and allow them to get to the next 20%, 30% of automation, in terms of the end-to-end process?ββ
As part of this, SS&C Blue Prism is soon to launch new technology which helps organizations build and embed AI agents within workflows, as well as assist with orchestration. Those who attended TechEx Global, on February 4-5 as part of the Intelligent Automation conference, where SS&C Blue Prism participated, got the full story, as well as understanding the companyβs ongoing path.
β[SS&C Technologies] are one of the biggest users of RPA in the world,β adds Halpin. βWe have over three and a half thousand digital workers deployed [across the SS&C estate]. Weβre saving hundreds of millions in run-rate benefit. Weβve about 35 AI agents in production attached to those digital workers doing [β¦] complex tasks, and really, we just want to share that journey.β
Watch the full interview with Brian Halpin below:
Photo by Patrick Tomasso on Unsplash

