Camunda released its
2025 State of Process Orchestration and Automation Report,
revealing 82% of organizations fear "digital chaos" due to increasingly
complex, interconnected, and automated processes. The report highlights
that organizations now manage an average of about 50 endpoints to
execute tasks that are part of a process in their business. This is an
increase of 19% over the past five years, and is contributing to growing
business risk.
According to the report, a lack of control has increased compliance
risks for 82% of organizations, while 77% report higher risks of core
business processes failing. Alarmingly, 82% believe that, if these risks
go unchecked, they could lead to what could be described as "Automation
Armageddon."
"End-to-end process orchestration and automation are critical to
delivering business outcomes. However, today's digital infrastructures
and processes are both complex and interdependent, making it a
significant challenge," said Kurt Petersen, senior vice president, customer success, at Camunda.
"In a constantly evolving landscape, organizations often struggle with
siloed tools and technologies, which hinder their ability to streamline
operations or achieve full visibility. Without decisive action,
automation programs risk overwhelming organizations with fragile
solutions, lack of comprehensive governance, excessive total cost of
ownership, and increasingly reduced agility to meet changing business
needs. Ultimately, companies who can't get their automation under
control will lose out to savvy competitors who have mastered process
orchestration and automation."
AI: the scaling and operationalizing challenge
Artificial intelligence is transforming business operations as
organizations leverage large language models (LLMs), machine learning,
or other AI capabilities to enhance operations and improve customer
experiences. However, in many cases, AI is only deployed as a point
solution to tackle a single task, rather than supporting a business-wide
strategy. While most organizations are eager to expand their AI
capabilities in the next three years, they face significant challenges
in effectively scaling and operationalizing AI.
AI in organizations. Source: State of Process Orchestration and Automation Report 2025, Camunda.
The report reveals:
- 85% of organizations face challenges in scaling and operationalizing AI across their business.
- 84% say a lack of transparency in applying AI applications within business processes is causing regulatory compliance issues.
- 93% believe AI must be fully integrated into orchestrated processes to maximize the return on investment and business value.
Unlocking value through process orchestration
Many organizations have implemented significant automation but often
face challenges in effectively managing it across diverse systems and
processes. Successful organizations unlock value from automation by
leveraging process orchestration
as a critical capability for coordinating the moving parts or endpoints
of a business process and sometimes even integrating multiple
processes.
Process orchestration in organizations. Source: State of Process Orchestration and Automation Report 2025, Camunda
The report highlights:
- 82% of businesses recognize the need for better tools to manage how their processes intersect.
- 79% report that, while they have implemented
significant automation, they lack a way to control, manage, and sustain
it effectively.
- 86% say a company cannot have hyperautomation without having process orchestration.
- 81% say, without process orchestration, achieving an autonomous enterprise will be a pipe dream.
"If organizations are to successfully operationalize AI across their
entire business, AI applications and services must be orchestrated like
any other endpoint within automated business processes. This will ensure
they remain compliant and maximize the return on investment from their
AI investments. Process orchestration is the key to managing complexity,
connecting legacy systems, and coordinating diverse endpoints. Without
it, hyperautomation and the autonomous enterprise will remain out of
reach for most organizations," added Petersen.