Workplace automation stories
Salesforce survey finds Australia and New Zealand workers using AI agents daily, but accountability, privacy and trust remain the biggest concerns.
Only about 10% of APAC organisations say their identity systems can fully secure AI agents, bots and service accounts.
Most firms are now putting AI PCs into staff hands as they seek faster processing, better security and more productive workflows.
The move signals a deeper push into Australia and New Zealand as Anthropic courts enterprise and government customers from a Sydney base.
Embedded engineers will help enterprises move generative AI from pilots into production as Cognizant deepens its Google Cloud partnership.
Unapproved AI agents are already exposing firms to hidden security gaps, with LevelBlue saying many are running tools without oversight.
Marketing teams can now link Adobe tools with outside AI services under a governed system aimed at auditable customer experience workflows.
Most IT staff say AI is adding scrutiny, trust checks and governance duties, offsetting time saved by automating routine work.
Chartered Management Institute launches AI leadership courses as survey finds most UK managers lack the training to turn spending into gains.
Singapore employers struggle to fill data and AI roles as 95% report tech hiring challenges and upskilling costs bite.
Rising Australian demand is driving wider take-up of OpenAI's Codex, as the coding agent gains Chrome access for signed-in work across web apps.
Most UK marketing leaders plan to boost AI budgets, but consumers want clearer rules before trusting adverts made with it.
Concern is growing over who controls AI decisions, even as 74% of UK consumers have used the technology in the past six months.
Most Australians would adopt AI sooner if tougher safeguards were in place, yet only 1% say they completely trust the technology.
Companies are finding that AI boosts performance only when it removes repetitive work, with human judgement still needed to prevent errors and burnout.
Employers are tightening recruitment as 88% struggle to find workers with AI skills, while 37% say AI-written CVs cloud judgement.
Only 16% of employees are seeing big productivity gains despite average UK company spending of GBP £235,000 on AI and emerging tech.
Irish executives are saving time with AI, but the country still ranks as the most wary of its impact among four European markets.
More than half of small business leaders report higher productivity after adopting AI, with spending linked to savings of up to 10 hours a week.
Australian firms may soon run with far fewer managers as AI agents take over tasks once done by lawyers and analysts.