Productivity stories
Utilities are warning that AI-fuelled data-centre demand will strain grids, with 77% expecting growth to outpace new supply.
The rollout should save staff hours on internal updates as XMA uses screens to target messages across three offices and dozens of divisions.
Borrowers and brokers could see faster decisions as the lender says automated workflows have cut handling times by up to 30%.
Three-quarters of geospatial teams say demand is rising faster than capacity, heightening pressure on staff, systems and decision-making.
Shop-floor systems are leaving most staff juggling too many devices, as only 5% of UK retail workers report no major in-store tech friction.
The funding will help banks and insurers automate lending, claims and onboarding while keeping AI decisions auditable and compliant.
Budget pressure and easier deployment are driving event teams to adopt AI translation, with 66% saying it beats human interpreters.
Higher profitability has helped push enterprise values up by about 15% for the average IT solution provider, according to a new report.
Rising demand for multilingual meetings is pushing enterprises towards AI tools, with 66% of event professionals rating them better than interpreters.
More firms are tying AI spending to measurable results, yet just 7% have established a return on investment, KPMG says.
Fewer than one in three manufacturers have received direct grant funding, underscoring doubts that the Government's strategy is reaching factory floors.
Managed service providers could cut hours of manual vulnerability work per client as the update links scans, remediation and audit evidence.
Stronger wholesale networks could help shield Irish consumers and SMEs from supply shocks as tighter margins and disruption bite across the food chain.
Tourism operators could capture more bookings as an AI receptionist now answers missed calls, checks availability and takes payments automatically.
Australian airports and utilities could soon use dog-like robots to inspect risky sites, as Datacom and Lenovo roll out AI systems.
Storm-hit growers in Hawke's Bay are spending on automation and cool stores to protect exports, cut bottlenecks and lift throughput.
Adoption alone may not lift output, with only 5% of Australian small firms fully using AI despite two-thirds already experimenting with it.
The Montreal startup's software aims to close a coaching gap by showing managers how reps handle calls, not just whether they happened.
Nearly half of Canadian business leaders are testing AI without seeing returns, as firms struggle to embed the technology into daily operations.
Boards are demanding proof of AI returns, as a survey found just 22% of finance leaders can link spending to business results.