Mohanty is an award-winning AI leader & entrepreneur. She is an Applied Science Manager at Amazon & Vice Chair of IEEE Women in Engineering.gettyYou’ve surely already heard of "agents" in the realm of artificial intelligence, and just in case you haven’t, the term refers to autonomous goal-oriented AI tools with the ability to reason, plan and remember, allowing them to proactively make decisions, execute multistep action plans and adapt from the results. There are several types of AI agents in the workforce already, ranging from business-task agents to those specializing in analytics, coding, customer support or research. AI agents have quickly become invaluable tools for companies. They let these businesses offload repetitive tasks while providing insights and support for employees.Businesses are also deploying the more powerful agentic AI, systems with a significantly broader scope of agency that can utilize several AI agents at once to achieve complex, fine-tuned and long-term goals with minimal human supervision. Let’s discuss how AI agents are currently transforming the workforce, and, in the process, learn the basics of integrating them into business workflows—making human employees and AI agents true digital collaborators.​AI Agents In The Workforce: Human-Silicon Synergy​In this swiftly changing landscape, there is a worry that AI will replace human jobs. While the breadth of that discussion is beyond the scope of this article, I can put some of those concerns to rest by laying out a framework where AI is used as an intelligent tool that supports the human workforce, rather than replacing it. AI agents, instead of being thought of as employees, can augment current organizational structures in several ways. In my experience, they can rapidly analyze vast amounts of data in hours that would otherwise have taken months, and they can provide critical actionable insights that may have been missed altogether. Such scenarios serve to illustrate how AI and humans can synergize. With AI agents, employees could have more time and better insights with which to make strategic decisions.​Healthy businesses need to transform along with the market, and the advent of AI agents is a major paradigm shift that will require a complete reimagining of workflows and workforces. Companies can automate processes, while also benefiting from the robust data analysis and strategic insights AI agents can deliver. Of course, they can also help your business operate on a 24/7 basis, keeping it online even while you sleep. Businesses slow to integrate these tools will have to play catch-up, and it is in this transformative space that a deeper understanding of just what AI agents can do would be useful.​So, What Can AI Agents Do?​Broadly speaking, there are arguably seven types of common use cases for AI agents. Analytics agents are meant to analyze data, producing business insights in the form of dashboards, graphs and reports. Next up are browser-using agents, which are meant to perform repetitive online tasks, such as filling forms and posting on various platforms. A common use case is the chatbot or conversational agents, which either use text or voice to serve the internal and external clients of a company, such as customer support and HR queries. Such agents can also provide training and troubleshooting to employees, guiding them through complex workflows.​Like browser-using agents, instead of specifically working within browsers, business-task agents use various enterprise software tools to perform administrative and process actions like data entry and invoice generation. Knowledge-specialized agents are known as domain-specific agents, and they are utilized to analyze data and documents in complex fields such as law and medicine. A popular AI agent use case that has seen broad utilization across both industry and individuals involves the ability to code. Known as developer agents, these tools can code, debug and test the programming needed by a company. Finally, we have research agents, which, as the term implies, can perform academic-style research for a company, from validating information and checking citations to answering technical queries.​Of course, there are custom AI agents that can be built to address industry-specific tasks (such as compliance, logistics, manufacturing or sales), and as we discussed, there are agentic AI systems that use multiple agents to achieve more complex goals. Those who want to properly integrate these tools into their workforce must take into account the human element at play. They must also place system-level checks and balances into the equation. These will let your tools learn and refine. Humans in the loop can ensure better decision-making. Be sure to use their nuanced perspectives to correct for undesirable outcomes.​Autonomy Governed By Guardrails​Correctly implementing AI agents in your workflows requires reimagining the way we work. While working to increase the efficiency and intelligence of your organization with these tools, it is also critical to implement strict compliance, governance and risk management procedures. Accountability, monitoring and oversight must be built into every process chain, and limits must be placed on the real-world actions of agents, essentially placing them in sandboxes. In this manner, risk-facing AI agents must process tasks in a virtual environment and provide outputs to a control architecture that verifies the results against a variety of parameters. Only then can the task be brought forward to other teams for execution.​While human and software guardrails on the autonomy of AI agents will help mitigate risks, proper implementation will also require instituting comprehensive data security protocols, reimagining organizational structures, setting well-defined business goals and upskilling the workforce on an ongoing basis. Of course, AI agents will only work as well as the quality of the data they can access, making data accuracy and completeness another critical front for businesses to maintain. This can help prevent a cascade of failures from small input errors. To truly benefit from AI agent integration, businesses must continually adapt their operations with data-driven insights.​​Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?