Imagine this: Every month, your team spends three full working days manually typing supplier invoices into the ERP system. Not because your employees are slow. But because the process dictates it.
This is exactly a typical scenario that can be fundamentally changed with AI automation – not a marketing buzzword, but a concrete decision with a measurable outcome.
The Use Cases That Actually Make Sense
Not every process is suitable for automation. But there are patterns that work time and again.
1. Document Processing
Invoices, quotes, delivery notes, forms. If your team opens documents daily, reads numbers, and enters them somewhere, that's a classic case. Today, AI systems read documents from PDFs, images, or emails – even if the format is constantly changing. Imagine document entry running automatically overnight, and by morning, everything is already in the system.
2. Customer Communication and Initial Inquiries
Not every email needs a human. Order status, opening hours, return processes, standard information – a well-configured AI assistant can handle this, around the clock, in German and English. Important: For anything that requires judgment, a human must stay in the loop. That's not a drawback; it's just common sense.
3. Internal Reporting and Data Consolidation
Many companies have their data spread across four different systems. On Mondays, someone sits for two hours copying numbers into an Excel sheet so the CEO gets a report. This can be completely solved with automation – and in the future, the report arrives automatically, daily, at 7 AM.
4. Quality Control and Anomaly Detection
Imagine unusual patterns in your order data or cash flow being detected automatically – before they become a problem. Manufacturing companies use AI to detect defects using camera images before a part leaves the line. It's not magic, but it has a real impact.
5. Document and Data Querying
You know the problem - there are hundreds, maybe even thousands of documents, and the answer to one of your questions is hidden somewhere inside them. With the help of smart, customized algorithms, documents can be linked and contextualized. The result? An answer in minutes instead of hours.
What AI Automation Is Not
Let's be honest here.
AI does not replace poorly organized processes. If your workflow is chaotic today, it will just be chaotic and fast after automation. Technology amplifies what is already there – the good as well as the bad.
Furthermore, almost all AI systems need a ramp-up phase. The first few weeks are for training, error correction, and fine-tuning. Anyone who thinks they can just buy a product and plug it in will be disappointed.
And: Not everything pays off. A process that occurs once a quarter and takes two hours is not a candidate for automation. The effort far outweighs the benefit.
How to Find the Right Starting Point
Most projects that run well don't start with the question, "How do we use AI?", but rather with: "What costs us the most time, and is the process stable enough to be automated?"
A good starting point has four characteristics:
- The process repeats frequently (daily, weekly)
- The inputs are reasonably uniform (documents, forms, emails)
- Errors can be found and corrected
- A human can verify the result if in doubt
If this applies to one of your workflows, getting started with AI automation is realistic – even without a massive IT budget.
Our Takeaways
AI automation delivers when the process is clear, expectations are realistic, and someone takes responsibility. The technology is not the bottleneck. Most of the time, it's a lack of clarity about what the goal actually is.
Start small. Measure. Scale what works.
If you'd like to know which of your processes are actually suitable for automation, get in touch with us. An initial conversation is often enough to gain clarity.