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DXC rolls out Amazon Quick AI workspace to 115,000 staff

Wed, 11th Feb 2026

DXC Technology has completed a company-wide deployment of Amazon Quick across its global workforce and launched a dedicated Amazon Quick Practise focused on large-scale AI roll-outs for organisations in Asia-Pacific and other regions.

The deployment covers 115,000 employees in 70 countries, which DXC described as one of the largest enterprise implementations of the Amazon Quick digital workspace so far.

In parallel, DXC has formed the DXC Amazon Quick Practise as a new unit. It aims to help enterprise customers move from AI pilots into production across complex IT environments with multiple suppliers and systems.

DXC positioned the move as an extension of its "Customer Zero" approach, which puts new technology into production inside DXC first under real operating conditions, including security controls and governance requirements. It said the internal experience shapes its customer delivery methods and operating models.

Internal deployment

Amazon Quick is positioned as an AI-driven digital workspace built around "agentic AI". DXC deployed it across business lines for information access, collaboration, and day-to-day delivery work in a highly distributed environment.

The platform connects employees with data across different internal systems, while maintaining security, access controls, and compliance requirements.

A central component is an AI Advisor Agent, designed as a single access point for AI-related knowledge, tools, prototypes, and feedback. More than 40,000 engineers are already using it.

The roll-out also introduced role-based advisors, including a Supply Chain Advisor, intended to provide operational guidance by linking staff to validated knowledge.

DXC said the deployment reduced friction between systems and simplified access to information, supporting faster decision-making and improved productivity. It also said it shortened the time between an idea and a customer-facing solution.

The initiative has been led by Chief Digital Information Officer Russell Jukes, who described it as a single execution model across technology, delivery, and operations that aligns digital, information, and AI work.

Jukes said the deployment gave DXC a way to test the technology at scale under real conditions.

"Deploying Amazon Quick across DXC's global workforce gave us the opportunity to pressure-test at true enterprise scale. We've seen firsthand how AI, when connected to the way people work and the processes they rely on, can reduce friction, improve decision-making, and help teams operate more effectively with the right guardrails in place. That experience now directly informs how we help our customers move beyond pilots and activate AI across their enterprises," said Russell Jukes, Chief Digital Information Officer, DXC.

New practice

The DXC Amazon Quick Practise brings together delivery teams including AI architects, automation designers, and adoption leads. DXC said the teams work with customers to identify use cases and roll out pre-built AI functions across areas such as AI-based research, business intelligence, and automation.

The practice is backed by more than 10,000 Amazon-certified professionals, according to DXC. It also said more than 1,000 staff have training and certification across Amazon AI specialisations and DXC's enterprise AI delivery programmes.

DXC said the practice uses deployment methods, governance models, and operating frameworks refined during its internal implementation, and that it has achieved multiple AWS AI competencies.

It also includes joint work with Amazon on targeted industry solutions. DXC highlighted financial services, insurance, and manufacturing.

Ramnath Venkataraman, President of Consulting & Engineering Services at DXC, said many organisations remain stuck in pilot projects and are looking for a path into operational use.

"Many enterprises are eager to use AI but struggle to turn pilots into real business impact. The DXC Amazon Quick Practise combines our enterprise delivery experience and proven operating models to help customers deploy AI responsibly, accelerate modernisation, and achieve measurable results. This is more than a partnership, it's a launchpad for AI-powered enterprise transformation, with a focus on making AI practical, scalable, and embedded into day-to-day operations, not just another tool sitting on the sidelines," said Ramnath Venkataraman.

Amazon Quick Director Jose Kunnackal John said the internal deployment at DXC showed how the product fits into daily work at scale.

"Amazon Quick is designed to enable enterprise-grade AI directly where people work. DXC has proven the power of Quick by successfully integrating into the day-to-day workflows of 115,000 employees across 70 countries. Together, through the DXC Amazon Quick Practise, we're well positioned to provide enterprises a proven, confident path to roll out AI at scale within the systems and data they already use," said Jose Kunnackal John.

DXC said the practice will focus on integrating and managing AI within customers' existing environments, with an emphasis on security and governance as deployments move into production.