Microsoft cuts AI software sales goals amid low demand
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A report from The Information that said Microsoft is struggling to sell some of its AI tools to customers sent the stock tumbling.
Executives at Microsoft and other enterprise software firms heralded 2025 as the year artificial intelligence would be capable of automating tasks that involve multiple steps, such as generating dashboards based on company sales data.
Satya Nadella believes emotional, soft workplace skills are more necessary amid the technological upheaval caused by new artificial intelligence tools.
Microsoft has lowered sales growth targets for its AI agent products after many salespeople missed their quotas in the fiscal year ending in June, according to a report Wednesday from The Information. The adjustment is reportedly unusual for Microsoft, and it comes after the company missed a number of ambitious sales goals for its AI offerings.
Lexington-based University of Kentucky is partnering with Microsoft on an enterprisewide AI project that aims to expand the adoption of the technology at its health system. Through the recently launched Commonwealth AI Transdisciplinary Strategy,
AI might not be transforming every job yet, but it’s having a big impact on developers.
From Agent 365 to Foundry's MCP tool catalog and new IQ services, Microsoft is moving beyond copilots and toward a future where software development becomes an automated assembly process.
The University of Kentucky is partnering with Microsoft to bring cutting-edge AI tools to classrooms, healthcare, and research.
As more companies bring in more agents, Microsoft is hoping its new observability platform Agent 365 makes the process easier.