IT services stories
Lower costs and a tax benefit lifted Acer Computer New Zealand's annual profit, even as revenue held steady at NZD $26.55 million.
The rollout gives Insight a test case for selling Microsoft's newest AI tools after a survey found most Australian firms are still only experimenting.
The platform aims to help large firms monitor and control autonomous AI as regulation tightens and deployments move into production.
The recognition could help Logicalis win more cloud and AI deals as Microsoft deepens co-sell ties with trusted partners.
Enterprise buyers could shift billions from seat licences as agentic AI is set to undercut up to 20% of SaaS spending by 2030.
Enterprise buyers will get a new way to assess AI service partners after NiCE introduced a specialism based on certified staff and proven results.
The status should help Logicalis win more AI deployment work as organisations move from pilots to wider use of Microsoft tools.
Recognition could help DataArt win more enterprise AI work as clients demand proof that Claude deployments can deliver in live environments.
Enterprise buyers could benefit as NiCE ties partner status to certified staff, live deployments and verified results in a new AI scheme.
Enterprise AI deployments may be exposing sensitive data through overlooked connector permissions, according to a new governance framework from Vivek Kumar.
Customer-facing teams will get real-time, source-backed research tools as Tech Mahindra seeks faster, more tailored sales discussions.
Regulated European firms could gain tighter data control as the pair target banking, healthcare and public sector AI deployments.
The Melbourne-based provider's top-70 finish signals Australian MSPs can compete on recurring revenue, growth and business health globally.
Rising risk and cost pressures are driving demand for cloud-managed, unified security systems as councils and energy firms seek simpler protection.
The result underscores the rising importance of dependable connectivity as businesses increasingly outsource support, security and network operations.
The Indonesian cybersecurity group can now pursue recurring software revenue, as shareholders backed a move into AI, publishing and data services.
Its national network upgrade is aimed at keeping business customers connected as demand for bandwidth and resilience continues to rise.
Millions who rely on pensions and income supports could see faster service as the department expands AI and automation across core systems.
The reshuffle gives the group a stronger Irish leadership structure as it tightens ties to Microsoft after buying Storm in 2024.
The deal broadens the IT services group's reach into deployment work and field service software, while adding a bigger UK base.