Enterprises are facing an integration problem no model alone can fix
Enterprise AI integration has become the defining challenge for organizations moving from pilot programs to production — and the companies solving it are reshaping how work gets done across every industry.
However, the path to measurable results is rarely straightforward. As agentic technologies evolve, companies are now shifting away from traditional integration models toward more intelligent, automated platforms, according to Sven Loberg (pictured, left), managing director at Accenture PLC. Accenture’s work with Boomi sits at the center of that shift — a partnership that has watched Boomi evolve from a conventional integration platform-as-a-service provider into a platform built for an agentic-first world.
“We’re seeing [an inflection point] in the product space with Boomi and how they’re approaching it, which was, if you thought about them a decade ago, it was very much traditional integration … and now it’s become an agentic world and they’re thinking about agentic,” Loberg said. “Our customers and citizen developers can start to use, and become super users, as far as building their own systems.”
Loberg and Dan McAllister (right), senior vice president for global Alliances and channels at Boomi, spoke with theCUBE’s John Furrier at Boomi World, during an exclusive broadcast on theCUBE, SiliconANGLE Media’s livestreaming studio. They discussed the shift from AI pilots to enterprise-scale deployment and how agentic architectures and enterprise AI integration are transforming business operations. (* Disclosure below.)









