AI Adoption stories
Nearly half of businesses have paused or scaled back AI projects as weak cost tracking leaves returns unproven and security gaps widen.
Professional services firms can now query their own data in plain English, with early users already checking cash flow, staffing and overdue invoices.
Mid-sized firms can test Unit4's AI tools in ERPx until August 2027, as vendors race to lower adoption risk for cautious buyers.
Businesses face a tougher test for AI agents as DevRev's new benchmark measures accuracy, cost and access controls in enterprise settings.
Ambiguous inspection rules are leaving audit firms unsure how to defend AI-assisted tests, prompting calls for clearer oversight from the PCAOB.
Pressure is rising on software vendors to prove governance and accountability as large organisations expand AI use beyond pilot projects.
Measured results are now under pressure as firms struggle to turn AI pilots into everyday tools and prove climate plans beyond targets.
Most firms are still increasing AI budgets, even as 57% of CX leaders say the technology has delivered little or no impact on operations.
Teams can now build reports and monitor alerts from ChatGPT or Claude, as the update widens access to trusted data inside Meltwater.
Most fixable flaws in live AI cloud systems are still exposed, with Orca finding 99.9% remain unpatched across major platforms.
Enterprises can now control both chatbot and agent traffic through one gateway as Citrix expands NetScaler for regulated AI deployments.
Businesses are being urged to tighten controls as AI tools spread faster than governance, with Quorum Cyber updating assessments to cut cyber risk.
The deal gives Saicon more specialist talent as enterprises race to link AI projects with cloud, data and physical operations.
Pressure from new AI rules is pushing UK firms in finance, healthcare and defence to demand systems that are secure, auditable and sovereign.
Regulated industries may get a safer route to production AI as the tie-up offers tighter control over data, governance and deployment.
Irish firms risk falling further behind as GPT 5.6 outpaces their ability to retrain staff, redesign workflows and justify AI spend.
While discovery is already mainstream, 45% of Hong Kong shoppers still balk at letting AI complete purchases, the survey found.
Yet only 8% of investors in Singapore said AI drove their last major decision, underscoring demand for human validation.
Australian users can now automate office tasks across apps and files as OpenAI rolls out ChatGPT Work and GPT-5.6 nationwide.
The top ranking signals growing demand for university AI that can manage sensitive data, automate admin work and scale across campus systems.