Change Management stories
Schools and trusts could cut admin and spot pupil risks earlier as fragmented data and software are pulled into one system.
Most UK accounting firms would divert AI savings to compliance or staffing, not higher-margin advisory work, a Ravical survey found.
By linking training to live workflows, the Berlin start-up aims to help firms turn more of their learning spend into measurable execution.
Industrial operators could cut downtime and costs as Schneider Electric and Deloitte target AI-led links between factory systems and business software.
Finance teams could get Sage Intacct up and running faster as AI cuts manual work in new PwC-led roll-outs and advisory workflows.
Despite widespread confidence in governance, UK companies are already seeing AI tools surface sensitive data as Copilot rollouts accelerate.
Most IT staff say AI is adding scrutiny, trust checks and governance duties, offsetting time saved by automating routine work.
Customers in the UK and other English-speaking markets will get more help adopting Unit4 software as Embridge expands its role beyond implementation.
Industrial firms face rising downtime costs unless they move from reactive repairs to data-led maintenance that proves its worth quickly.
Economic pressures are outweighing climate goals for many firms, even as two-thirds of supply chain leaders say they are cutting impact.
Most firms are revising incentives quarterly, but many still need up to two months to implement changes, a report says.
The change signals a push towards recurring software and IT revenue as the company expands beyond printers and copiers in Australia.
Microsoft is betting on AI training to ease workplace fears, after pledging to skill another 200,000 people in New Zealand.
The insurer will use cloud and AI tools to cut claims admin and speed up customer service under a five-year agreement with Microsoft.
More Kiwi firms are moving beyond AI pilots, prompting Avanade to bolster local delivery in New Zealand as demand for implementation grows.
Workers’ input on AI will shape how new tools are rolled out in Australian workplaces after Microsoft and the ACTU held a first summit in Sydney.
Australian firms may soon run with far fewer managers as AI agents take over tasks once done by lawyers and analysts.
Nearly half of Australian SMEs still avoid AI, but uptake is rising as firms use it mainly to cut admin and save time.
Regulatory and time pressures are slowing AI use in Australia's AEC sector, even as model-based workflows outpace the global average.
The hire signals Kinetic IT's push into sovereign digital services and AI as it seeks more government and critical infrastructure work.