AI Strategy stories
Marketers face new pressure to track brand presence in AI answers, as Conductor's suite helps enterprises monitor citations and sentiment.
Businesses under pressure to prove AI returns may use Qlik's new advisory service to sift viable agentic projects from broad ambitions.
Most firms lack the live, governed data needed for autonomous AI, with 66% of executives saying real-time access is non-negotiable.
Boards are being pressed to oversee AI risks and pay-offs as nearly three-quarters are judged to have only limited expertise.
Many self-described AI leaders in finance are still using it only in limited workflows because governance and data foundations are incomplete.
Businesses chasing AI gains are turning to data and integration upgrades, as akto gains higher Boomi backing to support that shift.
Most large enterprises expect AI agents to run software lifecycles within two years, as firms chase faster delivery and fewer stalled projects.
Buyers wary of shelved AI pilots may get clearer evidence on performance as Sparq puts tools through production-like stress tests first.
The hire comes as Hyland pushes a sharper AI message to customers and partners across global markets.
Nearly all Scottish tech firms now use AI, with full adoption doubling to 18% as sales and cashflow improve despite softer confidence.
More Kiwi firms are moving beyond AI pilots, prompting Avanade to bolster local delivery in New Zealand as demand for implementation grows.
The expansion follows early uptake of Microsoft’s previous pledge, as demand for AI training rises across business, schools and community groups.
Business customers could soon get more automated spending controls as American Express buys Hyper to add AI expense tools to its commercial services.
The plan could deepen UK firms’ dependence on overseas AI providers unless ministers also spur wider enterprise adoption and infrastructure.
By linking training to live workflows, the Berlin start-up aims to help firms turn more of their learning spend into measurable execution.
Only 58% of UK tech staff have formal AI training, leaving daily users exposed to errors, privacy risks and weak oversight.
The £500 million fund is meant to help British AI start-ups scale, as ministers seek growth and greater control over core technology.
The grant lets the London startup train an air-gapped coding model on UK infrastructure, bolstering supply for defence and other sensitive sectors.
Most providers are using AI already, but only a minority have the governance and revenue models needed to turn it into growth.
Businesses using multilingual AI may now face smaller language gaps, but newer model releases can still reverse gains and raise costs.