Technology Capabilities
Technology CapabilitiesDiscover how Agentic AI is redefining enterprise strategy, operations, and leadership. ...

Download GlobalLogic’s AI for Media playbook to learn how intelligent orchestration con...

In an article for RTO Insider, GlobalLogic’s Yuriy Yuzifovich, Malcolm Hay and Renan Gi...

GlobalLogic is now a Boomi Platinum Partner! See how our global scale, Boomi Lab expert...




GlobalLogic provides unique experience and expertise at the intersection of data, design, and engineering.
Get in touch
Enterprise AI is moving beyond prediction and content generation. The next wave is about engineered, goal-directed action — intelligence that operates within defined business constraints and governance models. This is the domain of Agentic AI: production-grade systems designed to orchestrate work across enterprise workflows. Together, these systems enable enterprises to operate as governed, agent-enabled systems intelligent agents create value under policy, and at scale.
Powered by structured orchestration layers and grounded foundation models, these systems move beyond assistive copilots to become governed, goal-driven agents embedded in real business operations.
Enterprise leaders are no longer facing isolated transitions. They’re navigating overlapping generational shifts in AI, sustainability, and workforce transformation all while managing cost pressure, legacy complexity, and growing talent gaps.
What makes Agentic AI different is not autonomy for its own sake. It’s engineered autonomy — intelligence engineered to operate within defined policies, observable constraints, and human oversight. When designed correctly, agentic systems don’t just optimize processes; they enable adaptive, resilient operating models.
Yet many enterprises remain stalled. According to recent HFS Research across industrial enterprises, 51% of leaders cited skills gaps as the reason AI initiatives fail or underperform, while nearly half struggle with integration, governance, and measurement. The technology is advancing quickly — but enterprise architectures and operating models often lag behind.
The opportunity is clear. The question is no longer whether AI can assist work. It is whether enterprises are ready to engineer intelligence into how work gets done.
For years, enterprise automation has focused on incremental efficiency. Robotic Process Automation (RPA) and traditional machine learning models have streamlined rule-based processes. But these systems automate steps, not outcomes.
Agentic AI marks a structural shift from scripted automation to goal-directed, policy-aware orchestration embedded directly into enterprise architecture.
Instead of following fixed instructions, an AI agent is assigned a defined objective within business constraints. Using foundation models grounded in enterprise knowledge, coordinated through an orchestration layer, and monitored through feedback loops, the system decomposes goals into tasks, executes actions, and adapts based on measurable results.
The difference is architectural. Traditional automation:
This does not remove humans from the loop; it elevates them. Employees shift from executing repetitive tasks to defining objectives, setting guardrails, supervising outcomes, and refining system performance.
This is not about building a self-running enterprise. It’s about engineering governed intelligence into enterprise operations.
While the concept may sound forward-looking, agentic systems are already delivering measurable value across industries.
Transforming Field Operations into Agentic Workflows

In consumer packaged goods (CPG), frontline execution determines revenue performance. Yet field teams often rely on static reporting and manual insights.
One global mobile-first field sales platform partnered with GlobalLogic to embed agentic capabilities directly into the workflow.
Rather than building another dashboard, the system was designed to sense sales behavior, evaluate performance against contextual benchmarks, and recommend next-best actions in real time. The result was not a reporting tool, but a governed agent embedded in the daily operating loop.
The system:
This is agentic design broken free of experimentation and proven in production.
A leading wireless carrier faced a recurring friction point: customers discovering billing issues after the fact.
Instead of reacting to complaints, they enlisted GlobalLogic’s support in engineering an agentic system to detect anomalies proactively. Analyzing billing data, usage patterns, and policy constraints enabled the agent to identify plan mismatches or unusual charges, triggered corrective actions, and generated clear customer communications — before escalation.
The workflow became a governed value loop: Sense > Evaluate > Act > Learn.
The impact was measurable in terms of customer satisfaction and retention.
Similar patterns are emerging across sectors:
The shift is consistent: workflows that once waited for human intervention now operate as governed, adaptive systems. And it’s already happening on the factory floor, in customer service, in field operations, and increasingly across domains where time, trust, and experience define business outcomes.
Agentic AI promises intelligence that acts, adapts, and improves — not just for faster work, but fundamentally different work. But between that promise and the operational reality of most enterprises lies a widening gap.
Most organizations were not architected for autonomous coordination. Their digital environments evolved function by function, platform by platform, often optimized locally but fragmented globally. Data sits in silos. Governance is applied after deployment rather than engineered into runtime behavior. Telemetry is incomplete. Integration layers are brittle.

In this environment, introducing agentic systems without structural discipline creates volatility, not transformation.
Autonomous AI agents require context, coordination, and constraint. They need access to governed enterprise data. They must understand business policy boundaries. They must operate within observable feedback loops. And they must be orchestrated across workflows — not embedded as isolated enhancements inside single tools.
This is why so many AI initiatives stall at the pilot stage. The model may perform. The use case may be compelling. But the surrounding system — data fabric, orchestration logic, runtime governance, observability — is not engineered for scale.
Agentic AI is not constrained by model maturity. It is constrained by architectural readiness.
Bridging this reality gap requires more than deploying another layer of enterprise software. It demands deliberate system design:
Without this foundation, agentic deployments remain experimental. With it, they become production-grade capabilities that close measurable value loops.
This is the inflection point. The question is no longer whether agents can act. It is whether the enterprise environment is engineered to support that action safely, reliably, and at scale.
At GlobalLogic, Agentic AI is delivered within the VelocityAI ecosystem — our integrated framework spanning Enterprise AI, AI-powered SDLC, and Physical AI.
Agentic capability is not a standalone experiment. It is engineered through:
This approach reflects a core belief: reliability is a system property, not a model feature.
Production-grade agentic systems must:
That is the difference between experimentation and enterprise deployment.
Agentic AI introduces a new layer of enterprise capability: intelligence that operates continuously across workflows, guided by policy, monitored through telemetry, and refined through feedback loops. That changes the mandate for every member of the executive team.
For CEOs and COOs, the challenge moves beyond optimizing individual functions. Governed autonomy requires orchestration across domains — aligning operations, technology, compliance, and talent around shared objectives. Agentic systems do not respect departmental silos. Leadership must design the connective tissue that allows intelligence to flow across them safely and measurably.
For CIOs and CTOs, the priority is no longer model experimentation, it’s architectural discipline. Designing an environment where agents collaborate under runtime guardrails, where decisions are traceable, and where policies are enforced automatically becomes the foundation of enterprise trust. Governance cannot be layered on after deployment. It must be encoded into the system itself.
For CFOs, the economics evolve. Traditional ROI frameworks measure cost takeout or cycle-time reduction. Production-grade agent ecosystems introduce compound return on intelligence — workflows that improve with use, reduce risk exposure, and unlock new value loops over time. Evaluating that compounding impact requires new metrics and new financial models.
For CHROs, the transformation is human as much as technical. As intelligent agents assume more executional responsibility, the workforce shifts toward supervision, exception management, policy refinement, and strategic oversight. This is not workforce replacement. It is workforce redesign — redefining roles, accountability, and skill pathways in an environment where humans and governed systems collaborate continuously.
Ultimately, governed autonomy becomes a leadership discipline.
Enterprises that succeed will not simply deploy intelligent agents. They will design operating models that make intelligence observable, enforceable, and aligned with strategic intent.
The shift from automation to agentic enterprise is not a technology upgrade. It is an architectural decision. Enterprises that treat Agentic AI as another layer of tooling will see incremental gains. Enterprises that engineer governed autonomy into their operating model will unlock compounding value — faster adaptation, tighter feedback loops, and measurable resilience across functions.
The defining advantage will not come from deploying the most advanced model. It will come from building the most disciplined system around it; one where orchestration is intentional, governance is embedded at runtime, data is unified, and human oversight is designed into every loop.
For executive leaders, the question is no longer whether agents can act. It is whether your enterprise architecture is ready to support governed action across workflows, domains, and geographies. That architectural readiness is what separates experimentation from enterprise reinvention.
We explore this approach in our executive brief, Beyond Modernization: Reinventing the Enterprise with Agentic AI. Download the full POV to see how governed orchestration, digital twin validation, runtime guardrails, and production-grade system design enable enterprise-scale agentic transformation.
Hi there — how can I assist you today?
Explore our services, industries, career opportunities, and more.