AI Strategy stories
Most firms are still trialling AI at the edges, leaving executives under pressure to prove productivity gains from technology spend.
Mid-market buyers could get software in eight to 12 weeks as the Newcastle studio bets AI will make fixed-fee delivery viable.
Legacy systems are slowing enterprise AI gains, with only 10% of large firms saying the technology is core to operations.
Only 28% of Australian workers say leaders are aligned on AI strategy, underscoring a governance gap as adoption races ahead.
Businesses struggling to embed AI in day-to-day operations will get help from a new OpenAI partner network backed by USD $150 million.
The move aims to help Wipro turn AI pilots into client workflows, as it trains 10,000 staff to deploy Claude across industries.
Pressure is mounting on security teams as AI spending rises, with 68% saying the job has become harder over two years.
Only 24% of workers feel ready to use AI effectively, as firms roll out tools faster than training and governance can keep pace.
Finance teams could see faster automation as Ramp places engineers inside clients to build bespoke AI systems on its platform.
Investment in AI-powered monitoring is rising as firms race to prevent hallucinations, outages and security risks in production systems.
The bill would give Canadians stronger control over personal data, as Ottawa seeks tougher oversight of AI, children's privacy and surveillance pricing.
The five-year gift aims to close Canada's AI skills gap by funding scholarships, research and training for students, professionals and small businesses.
Many large UK firms are still struggling to embed AI into daily operations, despite strong demand and rising governance spend.
Regional competition for AI talent and investment is intensifying as Manchester keeps the UK's top spot, ahead of Bristol and Glasgow.
Enterprises can now turn plain-language requests into reviewable AI workflows, as Dataiku seeks to close the gap between prototypes and production.
The round values the sovereign AI start-up at USD $1.5 billion as it seeks funding for research and compute to expand across key sectors.
The hire puts responsible automation and data governance at the heart of Tes360 as schools demand clearer benefits from AI tools.
Most large companies have shifted AI into live use, but senior leaders remain split on whether it will drive hiring or cuts.
Firms using embedded AI in meetings and messaging are already cutting admin, speeding decisions and improving customer response times.
Many businesses are finding that AI pilots stall when ownership, adoption and measurement questions emerge after the first demo.