AI Adoption stories
Businesses face higher operational and cybersecurity risks as Anthropic's agents let non-technical teams build software that can act across systems.
Finance chiefs could lift profits by 2029 if they back AI with broader systems upgrades, Gartner said, as budgets rise.
Telecom operators risk stranded pilots if they put AI live too quickly, with 43% of professionals citing rushed rollouts as the biggest mistake.
Most firms are now putting AI PCs into staff hands as they seek faster processing, better security and more productive workflows.
Nearly half of firms cannot win approval for more cyber staff, even as breach costs climb and AI adds new security risks.
Forrester warns the biggest gains in automation may come from machines that adapt in factories, roads and plants, not humanoid robots.
Enterprises face growing breach and compliance risks as autonomous software bypasses static access controls and acts across systems without oversight.
Retailers and manufacturers could get near real-time planning help as SAS opens a private preview of a supply chain agent.
Its anniversary highlights a push to win AI customers wary of opaque systems, with Viya pitched on governance, transparency and human oversight.
The update aims to curb AI project failure by baking governance into data preparation, analysis and automation across cloud-native workflows.
Investor relations teams could cut admin time as Q4’s new system turns meeting notes, reports and contact searches into AI chat tasks.
A Sydney base and local team are meant to help Anthropic win more Australian and New Zealand customers as AI adoption gathers pace.
More than 100 senior female finance executives will compare notes in London on funding pressure, AI adoption and systems risk.
Companies are finding that AI boosts performance only when it removes repetitive work, with human judgement still needed to prevent errors and burnout.
Most firms expect AI to streamline admin and planning support, while only 3% plan staff reductions this year, a survey shows.
Yet most Australian mid-sized firms still lack the training and governance needed to turn AI use into broader revenue gains.
Half of Singapore organisations with AI security coverage still reported a confirmed or suspected incident, exposing gaps in monitoring and response.
Technology leaders say the country risks falling further behind as AI adoption, cyber threats and rising costs outpace progress.
Employers are tightening recruitment as 88% struggle to find workers with AI skills, while 37% say AI-written CVs cloud judgement.
The bank is formalising its AI push with specialist in-house skills to build and test systems safely for customer use.