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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
Today, 9:13 AM
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"Eine umfassende Studie zur digitalen Präsenz von Schweizer Versicherungsunternehmen zeigt deutliche Unterschiede im Umgang mit Kundinnen- und Kundenbewertungen.
Der neu veröffentlichte hypt Report – Insurance Switzerland 2026, der in Zusammenarbeit mit der HES‑SO Valais-Wallis entstanden ist, untersucht die Google‑Profile von 1’820 Versicherungsagenturen und macht sichtbar, wie stark die digitale Wahrnehmung in der Branche variiert.
Besonders ins Auge fällt, dass über die Hälfte der Versicherungsstandorte weniger als 15 Bewertungen aufweisen – zu wenig, um ein verlässliches Bild der Kundenzufriedenheit zu vermitteln oder digital sichtbar zu werden. Dort hingegen, wo regelmässig Feedback eingeholt wird, zeichnen sich deutlich positivere Eindrücke ab. Viele dieser aktiven Agenturen erreichen Bewertungen von über vier Sternen und profitieren von einer deutlich höheren digitalen Präsenz. "
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 10, 4:46 AM
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Two months ago, a hotel that wanted a direct presence inside ChatGPT had no real path to get there. Booking.com and Expedia had secured their places as launch partners. The OTAs moved fast, as they always do. Hotels watched.
That has changed, visibly, in the past six weeks. The question is no longer whether direct AI distribution is possible. It is whether any given hotel is building it or waiting to see how it goes.
The ones building it fall into roughly three categories. Each is doing something meaningfully different. The differences matter.
The chain that treated AI as infrastructure
Hyatt is the clearest example of a hotel company that made a decision — not a pilot, a decision — to rebuild around conversational search before the channel existed.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 10, 4:37 AM
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In BCG’s 2025 global pan-industry analysis of AI adoption, fewer than 10% of hospitality companies surveyed could be called “future built,” defined as having cutting edge AI capabilities and generating substantial value from it. Twenty-five percent of hospitality firms fell into the “AI-scaling” category, meaning that they have an AI strategy that is starting to produce real returns across multiple organizational activities.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 9, 1:16 PM
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Search engines and booking platforms are no longer the only intermediaries between hotels and their customers. Artificial intelligence-based assistants – ChatGPT, Google AI, Gemini, Perplexity and even OTA chatbots – are profoundly transforming the way travellers search for, compare and choose accommodation. In this new ecosystem, being well ranked is no longer enough: you need to be understood by AI. This is precisely the challenge addressed by our new white paper, ‘Become visible to AI – The keys to semantic optimisation and GEO for hotels’, aimed at hoteliers, destinations and tourism stakeholders. From SEO to GEO: why the rules of the game are changing For years, online visibility relied mainly on traditional SEO: keywords, inbound links, positioning in Google results. Today, generative response engines work differently. They no longer list dozens of links, but directly offer a few recommendations – often three to five hotels – in response to a request made in natural language. This change marks the transition from Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) to Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO). To be selected by AI, a hotel must be able to provide clear, structured, consistent and verifiable information from multiple sources (website, OTA, Google Business Profile, SIT, platform, etc.).
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 9, 12:35 PM
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"La course ne s’arrête pas : le modèle ChatGPT 5.4 vient de débarquer Le 5 mars 2026, soit deux jours après la rédaction de cet article, OpenAI a dévoilé GPT-5.4. On se rappelle que les modèles Instant 5.2 sont sortis en février, et que GPT-5.2 a été déployé en décembre 2025. Trois générations de modèles en moins de trois mois. Les géants de l'IA sortent leurs mises à jour plus vite que tu peux lire leurs notes de version. Ce n'est pas une raison de paniquer, c'est une raison de comprendre les fondamentaux plutôt que de courir après chaque mise à jour. Ce que ChatGPT offre, version gratuite ou payante Commençons par débroussailler le terrain, parce que plusieurs d’entre vous utilisent ChatGPT sans vraiment savoir ce à quoi ils ont accès. La version gratuite te donne accès au modèle GPT-5 en mode limité, c'est-à-dire que la plateforme choisit elle-même le niveau de réponse selon la charge des serveurs. Tu peux générer quelques images par jour, effectuer des recherches web basiques et profiter d'une mémoire conversationnelle élémentaire. C'est fonctionnel, mais le système choisit souvent lui-même le modèle utilisé, sans que ce soit toujours le plus puissant."
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 6, 1:03 PM
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"OpenAI built the checkout tech but couldn't get users to actually buy. That's a reprieve for OTAs, and a reality check for anyone assuming AI commerce is inevitable.
Buying or booking directly inside ChatGPT has officially become vaporware — and investors in Expedia and Booking Holdings are breathing a sigh of relief.
OpenAI is shifting its shopping strategy to focus on discovery and research, leaving checkout to third-party app developers, The Information reported Thursday. "
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 6, 10:17 AM
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The ability of artificial intelligence (AI) to transform the travel industry is not up for debate. The discussion has moved on to what will radically change, how quickly and industry and consumer readiness.
Agents acting autonomously to book travel may be some time away, according to travel executives.
During a panel at ITB Berlin with executives from Booking.com, Google, Sabre and Skyscanner, James Byers, group product manager of Google, stressed how different retail and travel are.
“The world of retail and the world of travel have very different dynamics in how users go through the journey, how they consider these big purchases, in how they transact and who they transact with.”
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 5, 10:46 AM
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"Airbnb is moving beyond its core short-term rental business and expanding toward a platform that covers the entire travel journey. Speaking at ITB Berlin, company executives outlined a strategy that includes vacation rentals, boutique hotels, experiences, and potentially airport transportation services within the same ecosystem. The move revives Airbnb’s pre-pandemic ambition to become a comprehensive travel platform rather than just a marketplace for homes. For hoteliers, this signals that Airbnb increasingly sees hotels as part of its growth strategy — not just as competitors.
Key takeaways
Airbnb’s strategy is expanding beyond rentals: The company is positioning itself as a platform where travelers can plan and book their entire trip, including accommodation, experiences, and transportation. Airport transportation may be added soon: Airbnb is already testing airport pickups and private car transfers in several regions, suggesting ground transportation could soon become part of the booking journey. Hotels are becoming part of the platform: Airbnb executives highlighted hotels — especially independent and boutique properties — as an important addition that could significantly expand the platform’s customer base."
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 5, 1:12 AM
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“Votre prochain client est en train de planifier son voyage. Il n’a pas ouvert Google, il n’a pas tapé votre nom... il a demandé à son agent IA. Et cet agent a répondu, avec ou sans vous.”
C'est ce qu'on appelle l'IA agentique.
Ce scénario, il est déjà en train de se jouer et ça bouge très vite. Evaneos vient de s’installer dans ChatGPT. Booking, Expedia, Airbnb aussi se repositionnent à toute vitesse. On ne parle pas de communication mais bien de vrais choix stratégiques.
J’ai voulu faire le point : de quoi on parle vraiment, pourquoi maintenant, ce qu’il se passe déjà dans le tourisme…
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 4, 1:59 PM
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"In the face of the LLM threat, Booking Holdings thinks it can repeatedly grow its top line 8% annually over the "medium term" and earnings per share 15% over the same timespan.
Booking Holdings Chief Financial Officer Ewout Steenbergen said Tuesday the traffic that his company receives from the large language models "is very small" and "it's not growing."
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 3, 5:12 AM
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"The European Commission has introduced a voluntary Code of Conduct on Online Ratings and Reviews for Tourism Accommodation to address fake and misleading hotel reviews. The initiative aims to improve transparency, strengthen consumer trust and support fair competition within the European hospitality market. Major booking platforms and industry associations have joined the framework, which sets common principles for review verification and clearer rating methodologies. While not legally binding, the code aligns with broader EU digital regulation and signals continued scrutiny of online platform accountability."
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 3, 3:32 AM
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2026 veröffentlicht der Verband Internet Reisevertrieb e.V. (VIR) bereits die 21. Ausgabe der „VIR Daten & Fakten zum Online-Reisemarkt“. Teil der VIR Daten & Fakten zum Online-Reisemarkt sind wie jedes Jahr die Studienergebnisse der FUR-Reiseanalyse mit Kennzahlen zur Tourismusnachfrage im deutschen Gesamtreisemarkt. Ein besonderer Schwerpunkt liegt auf dem wachsenden Einsatz von Künstlicher Intelligenz im Tourismus. Ergänzt werden diese durch aktuelle Marktforschungsdaten von Travel Data + Analytics (TDA) zur Entwicklung des Veranstaltermarktes, zu Buchungsverhalten, Saisontrends und Umsatzentwicklungen.
Die Auswertungen zeigen ein klares Bild: Der deutsche Reisemarkt hat sich 2025 weiter strukturell verändert. Bei 77 % aller Reisen wird inzwischen mindestens eine Reiseleistung online gebucht – 2024 lag dieser Anteil noch bei 74 %. Gleichzeitig hat bereits jede sechste Person in Deutschland (17 %) Künstliche Intelligenz für die Reiseplanung genutzt. Trotz wirtschaftlicher Unsicherheiten bleibt Reisen für die Menschen in Deutschland ein fester Bestandteil ihres Lebens. Der deutsche Reisemarkt entwickelt sich damit nicht spektakulär, aber strukturell tiefgreifend: preisbewusster, digitaler und zunehmend KI-gestützt – bei gleichzeitig robuster Nachfrage.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 3, 3:28 AM
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In his recent Skift article, Rafat Ali uses the term “Claude Effect” to describe a new market pattern linked to Anthropic and its AI model Claude. The phrase does not refer to a specific travel product. Instead, it describes what happens when Anthropic announces a new AI capability: investors rapidly sell shares in the sector that could be affected, even if the tool is still early or unproven. Ali argues that travel — an industry built on managing complexity through intermediaries — could be next to experience this kind of market shock.
Key takeaways
The Claude effect is about anticipation, not replacement: Markets have reacted strongly to AI previews in legal, finance, and cybersecurity. The disruption is based on perceived future capability, not fully deployed products. Travel’s business model is built on managing complexity: OTAs, GDSs, and TMCs earn margins by simplifying search, comparison, booking, policy enforcement, and pricing. If AI agents absorb that complexity, their role could be questioned. Consumer booking is an obvious pressure point: An AI agent that can search, compare, and book trips through conversation — connected directly to airline and hotel systems — could challenge the traditional OTA interface model.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 10, 9:36 AM
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OpenAI is shifting its Instant Checkout offering in ChatGPT, tempering the theory that artificial intelligence (AI) could render intermediaries nonessential in travel.
The AI giant reportedly said that it is moving Instant Checkout to ChatGPT apps for more seamless purchasing. A number of travel players, including Expedia, Booking.com, Skyscanner, Accor, Lighthouse and others, have launched ChatGPT apps.
“We’re evolving how we approach commerce in ChatGPT to better meet merchants and users where they are,” OpenAI said, according to the report from The Information. The company said it is also working on bettering product search and discovery within ChatGPT.
Instant Checkout was built on OpenAI and Stripe’s co-developed Agentic Commerce Protocol. The pair initially announced instant checkout last September with brands like Shopify and Etsy, as other major players such as Google and Visa also leaned into agentic payment exploration. Though no travel brands were included at the launch, the move seemingly shifted the concept of AI travel distribution past the theoretical stage.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 10, 4:43 AM
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At ITB Berlin, travel technology executives discussed how artificial intelligence is reshaping the industry’s foundations. The conversation highlighted a shift toward becoming “AI-native,” meaning companies design their systems, products and processes around AI rather than treating it as an optional add-on. Leaders from Sabre, Booking.com, Google and Skyscanner emphasized that AI will increasingly influence everything from pricing and search to retailing and customer service. While the industry is already experimenting with new AI capabilities, the broader transformation will depend on infrastructure readiness, consumer trust and the complexity of travel transactions.
Key takeaways
Becoming AI-native: Travel companies are beginning to embed AI across the entire product lifecycle—from pricing and search to booking, payments and customer service—rather than deploying it as a standalone feature.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 10, 4:34 AM
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" Artificial intelligence is beginning to reshape the hotel industry far beyond isolated tools such as chatbots or automated pricing systems. According to Boston Consulting Group, the next wave of innovation will come from “AI-first” hotels—properties that integrate AI across their entire operating model rather than treating it as an add-on technology. By embedding AI into commercial, operational, and guest-facing processes, hotels can streamline workflows, improve decision-making, and deliver more personalized experiences. However, achieving these benefits requires significant changes in data infrastructure, talent, and leadership commitment. Key takeaways - AI-first operating model: Hotels that redesign their operations around AI rather than layering it on top of existing systems can achieve leaner teams, faster processes, and more data-driven decision-making."
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 9, 1:15 PM
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Suchmaschinen und Buchungsplattformen sind nicht mehr die einzigen Vermittler zwischen Hotels und ihren Kunden. KI-basierte Assistenten – ChatGPT, Google AI, Gemini, Perplexity oder auch die Chatbots der OTAs – verändern grundlegend die Art und Weise, wie Reisende nach Unterkünften suchen, diese vergleichen und auswählen. In diesem neuen Ökosystem reicht es nicht mehr aus, gut platziert zu sein: man muss auch von der KI verstanden werden. Genau auf diese Herausforderung geht unser neues Whitepaper „Werden Sie für KI sichtbar – Die Schlüssel zur semantischen Optimierung und GEO für Hotels” ein, das sich an Hoteliers, Reiseziele und Akteure im Tourismusbereich richtet. Von SEO zu GEO: Warum sich die Spielregeln ändern Jahrelang basierte die Online-Sichtbarkeit hauptsächlich auf klassischer SEO: Schlüsselwörter, eingehende Links, Positionierung in den Google-Ergebnissen. Heute funktionieren generative Antwortmaschinen anders. Sie listen nicht mehr Dutzende von Links auf, sondern geben direkt einige Empfehlungen – oft drei bis fünf Hotels – als Antwort auf eine in natürlicher Sprache formulierte Anfrage. Diese Veränderung markiert den Übergang von Search Engine Optimization (SEO) zu Generative Engine Optimization (GEO). Um von einer KI ausgewählt zu werden, muss ein Hotel klare, strukturierte, kohärente und überprüfbare Informationen aus verschiedenen Quellen (Website, OTA, Google Business Profile, SIT, Plattform) bereitstellen können.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 9, 12:30 PM
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"Cette nouvelle édition est d’ailleurs plus large que celle analysée en 2024. Alors qu’on parlait alors de 14 industries majeures, la version 2026 couvre désormais 18 industries et intègre YouTube pour la première fois, aux côtés de Facebook, Instagram, TikTok et X. La méthodologie repose sur un échantillon de 150 entreprises choisies aléatoirement par industrie, à partir d’une base de plus de 200 000 entreprises.
Voici 5 constats que je partage avec vous, issus de ce plus récent rapport.
1. LA BAISSE D’ENGAGEMENT SE POURSUIT Dans mon article de 2024, je soulignais déjà une baisse généralisée des taux d’engagement, avec TikTok qui demeurait largement devant, Instagram qui se stabilisait quelque peu, Facebook qui tenait le coup, et X qui poursuivait sa descente.
En 2026, le portrait s’est encore clarifié."
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 6, 10:46 AM
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Künstliche Intelligenz ist längst kein Zukunftsthema mehr – sie greift tief in die Wertschöpfungskette der Reisebranche ein. Von der Frage, ob Online Travel Agencies durch agentische KI geschwächt oder gestärkt werden, über die neue Bedeutung authentischer Inhalte im digitalen Hotelmarketing bis hin zu veränderten Kompetenz-Anforderungen im Recruiting: Die Branche steht an mehreren Fronten gleichzeitig unter Transformationsdruck. Die folgenden drei Analysen beleuchten diese Entwicklungen aus unterschiedlichen Perspektiven – Kapitalmarkt, Marketingpraxis und Personalstrategie – und zeigen, dass KI nicht nur Prozesse automatisiert, sondern Machtverhältnisse verschiebt, Markenführung neu definiert und Arbeitsprofile grundlegend verändert.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 6, 2:30 AM
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"OpenAI built the checkout tech but couldn't get users to actually buy. That's a reprieve for OTAs, and a reality check for anyone assuming AI commerce is inevitable.
Buying or booking directly inside ChatGPT has officially become vaporware — and investors in Expedia and Booking Holdings are breathing a sigh of relief.
OpenAI is shifting its shopping strategy to focus on discovery and research, leaving checkout to third-party app developers, The Information reported Thursday. "
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 5, 10:35 AM
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OpenAI has reduced the scope of its plans to enable direct product purchases inside ChatGPT. The company had explored allowing users to discover products and complete transactions entirely within the chatbot interface. Instead, the current direction focuses on using ChatGPT as a discovery and recommendation layer that sends users to external websites or apps to finalize purchases.
For travel and hospitality, this signals that AI assistants may increasingly influence where travelers look and compare options, even if bookings themselves still occur on hotel or platform websites.
Key takeaways
AI as a discovery channel: ChatGPT is likely to act primarily as a recommendation and discovery tool rather than a booking engine, helping travelers find hotels before sending them to external booking channels. Transactions remain external: OpenAI’s shift means that bookings will still be completed on hotel websites, OTAs, or other travel platforms rather than directly inside the AI interface.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 4, 2:19 PM
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Travel companies across the industry are investing heavily in AI-powered travel assistants designed to plan, compare, and eventually book trips automatically. The technology promises to transform travel planning into a conversational experience where AI agents handle research, itinerary building, and booking decisions. However, consumer adoption of fully automated travel planning remains limited, and many travelers still prefer to remain directly involved in the booking process. As a result, much of the current investment reflects a strategic bet on how travel discovery and booking may evolve rather than a response to existing customer demand.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 4, 7:05 AM
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Payment systems have become an essential strategic priority for today’s hospitality and travel industry, shaping every stage of the customer journey and influencing all facets of a company’s financial operations.
However, modern payments in travel are often blocked by legacy booking systems and manual processes that weren’t designed for the real-time nature of today’s global travel ecosystem. Leading companies across hospitality and travel are replacing these fragmented payment processes with unified systems and seeking long-term partners that can support global scale.
This new report, based on a survey of 368 hospitality, travel, and leisure executives, reveals how modern payments in travel and related infrastructure directly impact profitability — driving conversion, guest satisfaction, operational agility, and long-term revenue growth.
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 3, 3:35 AM
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Der deutsche Reisemarkt hat sich 2025 weiter strukturell verändert: bei 77 % aller Reisen wird inzwischen mindestens eine Reiseleistung online gebucht – 2024 lag dieser Anteil noch bei 74 %. Gleichzeitig hat bereits jede sechste Person in Deutschland (17 %) Künstliche Intelligenz für die Reiseplanung genutzt. Das zeigen die Auswertungen der diesjährigen Veröffentlichung der „VIR Daten & Fakten zum Online-Reisemarkt 2026“ des Verband Internet Reisevertrieb e. V. (VIR).
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Scooped by
Roland Schegg
March 3, 3:30 AM
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Phocuswright’s latest study, Budgets, Barriers and the Race to Agentic AI, finds that more than 60% of travel companies are already engaging with agentic AI, marking a decisive shift from experimentation to operational ambition. Presented ahead of discussions at ITB Berlin, the research suggests 2026 could be the year AI moves into the core of travel operations. Unlike earlier generative tools focused on content, agentic AI is designed to execute complex, real-world tasks across systems using real-time data. While enthusiasm and budgets are rising, many companies are still in early stages of scaling and organizational readiness.
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