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Study: AI agents hit 68% adoption in big business

The news: AI agent adoption in business is happening at an accelerated rate with companies like Intuit, Capital One, and Highmark Health revealing how agents are solving problems and enhancing enterprise workflows, per VentureBeat.

According to KPMG, 33% of businesses now deploy AI agents, up from 11% two quarters ago. Among enterprises with over 1,000 employees, that figure jumps to 68%, per VentureBeat. 

Businesses are focused on solving concrete problems with AI agents. For marketers specifically, it can speed up their creative operations, improve customer experience, and streamline campaign execution.

Examples of how other businesses have utilized agents include:

  • Tangible business impact: Agents deliver measurable results (e.g., Intuit claims 5-day faster payments, 10% higher full payment rate). 
  • Accelerated automation: Capital One deploys specialized AI agents for risk assessment, auditing, and auto loan matching.
  • Democratization and speed: Non-developers can build production features using tools like Claude Code with smaller teams of 3-4 engineers driving rapid iteration.
  • Strategic flexibility dominates: Enterprises are rejecting single-vendor lock-in. Multi-model (proprietary + open-source) and multi-cloud strategies are now standard  for companies like IBM and Zoom.

Potential caveats: Despite rapid adoption, the AI agent surge comes with tradeoffs. Many tools remain brittle outside narrow tasks, raising reliability concerns when they’re used at scale. 

  • Marketers risk over-automating customer touchpoints and losing nuance in brand voice.
  • Security and compliance lag behind deployment speed, especially in regulated industries. Venturebeat found that 10% of businesses adopting AI have no dedicated safety teams.
  • Open-source tools offer flexibility and lower cost, but may lack enterprise-grade support. And while smaller teams gain speed, governance gaps may emerge without centralized oversight. 

Our take: Enterprise AI agents have moved from labs to the front lines. For marketing leaders, that means a clear opportunity to start applying agents to accelerate creative work and squeeze inefficiencies out of existing workflows. 

As AI agent use becomes mainstream, ensuring an oversight on safety and reliability will become necessary requirements in protecting brand reputation.

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