Systems integration stories
The awards highlight how Genesys is leaning on partners to help customers turn AI pilots into wider deployments while managing governance risk.
Budget pressure is pushing security teams to prove ROI, while integration and staffing gaps continue to shape buying decisions this year.
Customers should see fewer bespoke integrations as SailPoint lets partners build native applications on its Atlas foundation.
The listing should speed procurement for cloud customers as employers face rising risks from impersonation, fraud and stolen credentials.
The tie-up gives UK public sector and finance customers a route to use AI on governed legacy records without losing auditability or control.
Financial services and other regulated firms gain local support to deploy Aryza software faster as Nucleo becomes its UK and Ireland partner.
Disconnected systems are costing hoteliers 322 hours a year and may be hampering guest service, according to new research.
Plant operators can now connect mixed equipment more easily as Yokogawa adds multi-vendor support and tighter security to its OpreX server.
The shift cut monthly hosting costs by about 40% and let the coffee supplier modernise ageing systems without disrupting deliveries.
Many firms are adopting AI quickly, but weak data architecture is leaving them unable to measure returns or manage governance risks.
Finance teams could see faster automation as Ramp places engineers inside clients to build bespoke AI systems on its platform.
The update aims to cut reconciliation work for enterprise finance teams by linking spend data directly with SAP S/4HANA Public Cloud.
Enterprise teams can now define AI agent permissions and security controls earlier, as Atsign's update links live architecture design with model prompting.
The deal will put Claude into banking, aviation and government systems, as DXC scales AI agents across regulated customer environments.
Most firms are still trialling AI at the edges, leaving executives under pressure to prove productivity gains from technology spend.
Council reorganisation is speeding up demand for cloud systems as Arcus Global posts 26 per cent recurring revenue growth since 2022.
The contract puts more than 70 airport systems under one roof as Perth's new terminal moves towards an expected 2031 opening.
Demand for controlled cloud services is rising as governments and regulated industries seek to keep sensitive data and operations within national boundaries.
The multi-year project is meant to cut costs and give IHH Healthcare real-time data as it replaces fragmented systems across three Asian markets.
The pact could open public-sector technology contracts spanning rail, banking and cyber security, though no deal values or specific projects were named.