business intelligence 3 Oct 2025
1. How do you define “intelligent automation,” and what sets it apart from traditional workflow automation in today’s enterprise context?
Intelligent automation is not just the next evolution of workflow automation — it's a steppingstone toward agentic business orchestration. That means blending AI, agents, low-code development, and dynamic business process orchestration into a system that doesn’t just automate tasks, but autonomously adapts, learns, and coordinates across the enterprise.
Where traditional automation is largely deterministic, intelligent automation is context aware. It can interpret signals in real time, prioritize based on urgency or behavior, and respond when business conditions change. But the real breakthrough comes when you shift from automating steps to orchestrating outcomes — across people, systems, and now, intelligent agents.
This is what we call agentic business orchestration: enabling work to move autonomously and intelligently across the enterprise with the help of agents within purpose-built solutions tailored to specific business logic and processes. It’s automation that is guided by human oversight but not constrained by it. To get there, organizations need a unified platform that brings together process mapping, business orchestration, and AI agents with the power of low-code tools in a single architecture.
2. What role does automation play in closing experience gaps across the customer journey from onboarding to support and retention?
Customer experience isn’t just about front-end touchpoints — it’s about how well the business moves behind the scenes. That’s where automation becomes essential.
By connecting siloed systems and orchestrating cross-functional processes, automation helps deliver consistency and responsiveness across the entire customer lifecycle. It accelerates onboarding by syncing data across platforms, supports dynamic case routing, and enables proactive service through contextual triggers.
When embedded across the value chain, automation becomes the foundation for agentic business orchestration. That means not just accelerating tasks but enabling intelligent agents and workflows to operate in harmony — adjusting, escalating, or resolving customer cases in real time. All of this can also be done autonomously to augment human performance and drive a non-linear increase in efficiency – even with humans still in the loop.
The result is a seamless, end-to-end experience that builds trust and loyalty.
3. What are the most common misconceptions organizations have when adopting automation to improve customer outcomes?
The biggest misconception is treating automation as a band-aid solution — something you add to a broken process and expect immediate transformation. In reality, automation must be part of a broader operational shift.
Organizations that succeed view automation as a strategy to drive business performance: first mapping processes, orchestrating and automating cross-functional workflows, and ultimately layering in AI to drive end-to-end orchestration through purpose-built solutions.
Another misconception is that automation tools can operate in isolation. Without integration, governance, and alignment, they create more friction than they solve. To drive real customer outcomes, automation must be part of a connected fabric — orchestrating across departments, systems, and now, AI agents — so the experience is cohesive, not fragmented.
4. Have you seen specific verticals (e.g., financial services, government, healthcare) realize faster returns with intelligent automation strategies?
Absolutely — financial services, public sector, and manufacturing organizations are seeing strong ROI, largely because of the complexity and compliance demands they face.
For example, financial services organizations, intelligent automation can accelerate loan origination by auto-extracting data from supporting documents, validating it against internal and external sources, and routing applications for approval — all while maintaining a complete audit trail. It can also streamline KYC/AML checks, regulatory reporting, and customer onboarding, cutting processing times from days to hours.
iQumulate Premium Funding leveraged Nintex Automation CE to document and reimagine 150+ processes, created smart forms to streamline communications with brokers, and automated internal quoting — saving 3,000+ hours of employee time.
Government agencies can use automation to manage benefits applications, licensing, and permits. By integrating data from multiple legacy systems and enabling real-time case tracking, agencies can reduce backlogs, improve citizen response times, and ensure compliance with transparency mandates.
Nintex worked with the County Court of Victoria to digitize its paper-based processes so that it could capture information electronically, as well as automate the routing of critical court documents.
For manufacturers, intelligent automation can coordinate supply chain workflows, from purchase order processing to quality inspections. Automated exception handling and compliance documentation help manufacturers maintain production schedules, reduce costly delays, and meet stringent regulatory standards in industries like aerospace and pharmaceuticals.
At Nintex, we helped CORE Molding Technologies automate workflows across the organization, including purchase order, chargeback application, and pricing approval processes.
These industries benefit when automation evolves into agentic orchestration. Instead of relying on static scripts, they can deploy responsive workflows and digital agents that learn from usage patterns, adjust to new policies, and reduce time-to-resolution — all while maintaining governance.
5. What KPIs should companies track to evaluate the success of automation-driven, customer-centric initiatives?
Beyond CSAT, the most meaningful KPIs reflect efficiency, speed, scale, and autonomy.
These include:
· Touchless resolution rate — the percentage of workflows or business process steps completed without manual intervention
· Time to resolution — how quickly business or customer-focused workflows are completed
· Human effort saved per workflow — the percentage of workflows that are automated
· Cost per transaction — measuring sustainable operational impact
More advanced teams also look at the volume and performance of agent-led tasks — a signal that they’re progressing toward true agentic orchestration.
6. What does the future of customer-centric automation look like, especially as AI and low-code/no-code platforms mature?
The future of customer-centric automation lies in systems that are not only intelligent but also adaptive and deeply embedded across the business. As agentic AI evolves and low-code/no-code platforms become easier to build with, organizations will shift from rigid, step-based processes to dynamic, context-aware workflows that can learn, adjust, and act in real time.
Rather than relying on disconnected point solutions, businesses will be empowered to build their own tailored applications — designed around their unique models, systems, and customers. This enables faster time-to-value, fewer dependencies on specialized development resources, and greater flexibility as needs evolve.
Importantly, this shift won’t just improve customer experiences — it will make organizations more efficient, more compliant, and more scalable in how they deliver value. By combining AI, automation, and applications in a unified platform, businesses will be able to proactively solve problems, reduce operational complexity, and build long-term customer trust.
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1. Given that independence and passion are more valued than income predictability, how should organizations rethink their support models for small businesses?
We often hear about the importance of financial stability and access to capital. Those factors, no doubt, contribute to a small business's success, but new research from VistaPrint reveals that small business owners (SBOs) are influenced by so much more. According to findings, internal factors - think independence, passion and community - drive SBO happiness today. SBOs rank “freedom to set my own schedule” (42%), “doing something I love or am passionate about” (41%) and “interacting with people, customers or society” (30%) as the top 3 things they enjoy most about being an entrepreneur. Not to mention, over half of SBOs are “much” or “somewhat” happier now compared to when they first opened their business. These takeaways recognize the vitality of America’s entrepreneurial spirit and power of looking inward, especially when times are tough.
From VistaPrint’s perspective, it’s important to advocate for that mindset with products, services and resources that support SBO’s journey at any stage. When you enable that freedom, you fuel fulfillment.
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