Cloud computing has become the status quo for virtually all industries. Cloud-based applications and systems help IT teams scale their technology capabilities quickly and cost effectively. And even if you’re not fully in the cloud, organizations use a hybrid approach with both cloud and on-premise infrastructure.
Understanding how to successfully implement cloud automation can lead to greater integration between all your systems and applications—and greater efficiency. Here’s the key points to keep in mind to increase efficiency with cloud automation.
Migrating Workflows to the Cloud: The Tricky Part
For many, migrating partial or entire workloads to the cloud is a key objective. However, in the complex IT environments most enterprises manage, critical business processes are rarely limited to a single server or application. Running cross-platform processes is very common. The resulting challenge is that migrating some infrastructure to the cloud can complicate the requirements for running these processes smoothly.
For example, a process running on a cloud application may need to use data stored in an on-premise data warehouse. The result is that often IT teams assume they can’t leverage automation tools for these activities.
Robotic process automation (RPA) has the flexibility to handle almost any process, regardless of where the application lives. So many of the apps commonly migrated to the cloud have an end-user focus and are managed by business units. And RPA provides flexibility with no-code automation features that are easy for business users, yet powerful for IT developers. This allows the entirety of a workflow to be streamlined to create an end-to-end automation solution.
Cloud Automation: A Missed Opportunity
Whether you’ve got a full cloud presence already built or are evaluating how to begin, don’t forget to evaluate your opportunities to automate the time-intensive and repetitive tasks that your team deals with every day. No doubt they would be pleased to have some of these error-prone transactions completed in an easier, more accurate way that also saves them hours of work!
Even complex mixed environments involving on-premise and cloud components are excellent candidates for automation. You may be surprised to learn how many common cloud applications can be automated, even if they involve information that crosses from on-premise servers to those in the cloud. Here is just a small sample of common cloud applications that are ideal candidates for automation.
- ServiceNow®: Automate password resets and other routine help desk activities.
- Salesforce® and Microsoft Dynamics®: Automate report generation to create and distribute regular reports or opportunity lists from your CRM.
- Amazon Web Services (AWS®): Integrate on-premise data with Amazon cloud databases, queues, and servers—or archive and offload large files for storage.
- Office 365®: Use Microsoft automation to create and publish daily sales or accounting Excel® reports or auto-generated Word® documents such as customer correspondence to OneDrive® or SharePoint®.
- Outlook®/Gmail™: Email automation can monitor an inbox for invoices or help requests that need immediate attention.
The Benefits of Cloud Automation
Based on the examples above, you may have some thoughts on how adding automation to your infrastructure could benefit your business. Simply put, if you have someone in any department spending more than 30 minutes every day on routine, manual work, robotic process automation from Automate can take some of the burden off their plate.
This RPA solution maximizes the ROI of the applications you use every day across your organization by helping you centrally manage automation and scheduling processes. It introduces powerful enterprise IT job scheduling and supports cross-platform dependencies to reduce complexity for your team.
Automate provides over 600 predefined actions and activities across many use cases. The software is flexible and can be trained to perform many of the mundane jobs your users might be spending time doing manually.
Cloud Automation Use Cases
- Scheduling and running applications across Windows®, Linux, AIX, and IBM i.
- Managing automated secure file transfer to send and receive files via FTP, FTPS or SFTP.
- Encrypting, decrypting and compressing files with PGP, ZIP, and other formats.
- Using web browser automation to interact with websites and desktop apps to upload, download, and enter data.
- Creating or processing Excel, CSV, XML, JSON, and other files.
- Importing and exporting data easily from any database to Excel, CSV, JSON, XML, and more.
- Live-monitoring mailboxes to receive and process email messages automatically.
- Uploading and downloading documents and data to SharePoint document libraries and lists.
- Monitoring processes and services to make sure apps are up and running.
- Remediating issues such as snapshot-ing and re-starting servers in the event of an outage.
- Making sure all services are running after a server restart.
- Checking internet connectivity on a regular basis.
- Pinging servers to make sure they are up and running.
- Testing cloud applications to make sure they are active.
- Generating or handling help desk tickets such as password resets and other repetitive requests.
- Checking internet connectivity on a regular basis.
- Interacting with Mainframe and IBM i systems using Telnet sessions.
- Connecting to and running command sequences or configuration operations over SSH terminal sessions on Linux, AIX, switches, and routers.
3 Reasons to Use Cloud Automation from Automate
- Save time and increase efficiency for each transaction that gets automated
- Free up employees for higher-value, customer-facing tasks
- Increase accuracy across hundreds or thousands of transactions
Help your team recoup lost time with sophisticated capabilities designed for today’s busy IT professionals.