AI Adoption stories
Employers are struggling to prove AI spending is lifting output, as ActivTrak’s new tools measure adoption, governance and return on investment.
Most AI projects are missing their targets as 65% of Chief Information Security Officers lack confidence in data security controls, a study shows.
Most technology leaders are still finding their feet as companies race to deploy AI despite skills gaps, data problems and compliance pressure.
More than 90 per cent of large-company executives now see outsourced support as vital to scaling agentic AI, a KPMG survey found.
Integration and governance gaps are slowing UK firms' AI rollouts, even as 91% say they have already moved projects into production.
Businesses risk wasting AI budgets on polite interfaces when the bigger gains come from linking systems, data and workflows directly.
More software teams could catch AI-made defects before release as Katalon’s new platform adds human approval, traceability and live monitoring.
Retailers could miss out on AI-led discovery unless product data is structured for answer engines, according to a Megantic and Shopify APAC whitepaper.
The recognition could help Sapiens win cautious buyers in regulated sectors, where insurers and lenders need AI decisions they can explain and audit.
The new platform targets regulated firms seeking auditable AI processes, after Felix raised USD $1.7 million to expand beyond legal work.
The rollout will let DXC test agentic AI across its back office before packaging proven workflows for clients in multivendor environments.
New research shows two-thirds of Australian business and IT leaders feel pressured to approve AI projects while overlooking security risks.
Many firms risk wasted AI spend as just 16% of workers have high AIQ, leaving staff ill-prepared for routine use.
The deal could cut admin and speed up decisions for more than one million businesses across Australia and New Zealand.
Most new customers in Asia Pacific and Japan already arrive via partners, underscoring Akamai’s shift to indirect sales as Fiona Zhang takes over the channel role.
Poor governance could expose Australian firms to legal, reputational and operational risks as they deploy autonomous AI agents at scale.
The selective scheme aims to speed enterprise AI uptake by linking trusted advisers with clients, while AI&Beyond handles delivery and shares revenue.
Regulated financial data made up 59% of generative AI policy breaches, as banks and insurers race to use the tools under tighter scrutiny.
The move gives lawyers faster access to verified authorities as the firm tries to cut research risk and adapt to AI-heavy workflows.
Clients want broader, data-led change tied to performance as the consultancy folds AI into manufacturing, procurement and investment work.