Change Management stories
More than 1,100 assurance staff will use a single cloud audit platform as the firm pushes standardisation and AI-ready workflows.
This partnership expands access to Scrum.org product ownership training to Coursera's global audience of millions of learners and employers.
Landmark Credit Union has turned a digital overhaul into growth, lifting business profiles above 7,800 and adding USD $150,000 in fee income.
Most firms are unprepared for AI-driven infrastructure risk, as Spacelift found only 19% have the governance needed to curb incidents.
Manufacturers could soon query live product data from AI tools, as Propel links its PLM platform to Claude, ChatGPT and Copilot.
The move aims to speed up repetitive audit tasks for nearly 85,000 professionals while keeping final judgements with human reviewers.
Bad AI hires are now feeding costly mistakes, with US employers hit far more often than UK counterparts, a survey shows.
Corporate learning teams are being pushed to redesign structures and skills as employers move from AI trials to daily use across operations.
Developers can now avoid manual test setup as Kong's new link keeps API definitions, environments and credentials aligned across Insomnia and Konnect.
Governance gaps are leaving firms exposed, with only 19% meeting the readiness bar as AI-related infrastructure incidents spread across organisations.
More firms are tying AI spending to measurable results, yet just 7% have established a return on investment, KPMG says.
IT teams can now spot oversharing and AI-readiness risks in Microsoft 365 from one chat window, as governance workloads rise.
The overhaul should cut manual work and improve reporting for 342,000 residents as the council replaces legacy finance systems with cloud software.
The rollout should save staff hours on internal updates as XMA uses screens to target messages across three offices and dozens of divisions.
Australian airports and utilities could soon use dog-like robots to inspect risky sites, as Datacom and Lenovo roll out AI systems.
Security teams and IT departments are being pulled closer together as access control becomes part of wider digital infrastructure.
Data silos and staff time are being cut as the township uses AI agents to speed calculations, analyse waste and answer residents online.
Nearly half of Canadian business leaders are testing AI without seeing returns, as firms struggle to embed the technology into daily operations.
Only 23% of firms say staff are fully ready for AI, even as spending and deployment surge ahead of training and governance.
Quality failures are prompting some firms to pull back from AI projects, as a UK survey found 18% have already abandoned or scaled them back.