Industry leaders predict a pivotal shift as AI agents move from pilot projects to full-scale deployment across enterprises and consumer channels by 2026, reshaping operations, customer experiences, and security landscapes.
Technology and retail executives predict that 2026 will mark a decisive shift from pilot experiments to widespread deployment of AI agents across enterprises and consumer channels, reshaping operations, customer journeys and cyber security architectures. According to the original report, senior leaders foresee fleets of semi‑autonomous software agents embedded across customer service, development, operations and cyber defence, operating alongside human teams rather than in isolation. [1][3][5]
In large organisations, the expectation is that agents will evolve from discrete tools into coordinated, system‑wide roles that orchestrate routine work and accelerate strategic tasks. Gartner forecasts that by the end of 2026, 40 percent of enterprise applications will feature task‑specific AI agents, up from less than 5 percent in 2025, a transition that industry analysts say will recast enterprise software from personal productivity aids into platforms for autonomous collaboration and dynamic workflow orchestration. Industry data shows this shift could also become a major revenue driver for enterprise software over the coming decade. [1][3]
Executives paint a picture of “Human+” teams where humans focus on high‑judgement decisions and creativity while agents handle repetitive, high‑velocity work. “As we move into 2026 and beyond, the rise of AI agents will reshape entire business value streams. The real breakthrough isn’t new tools; it’s autonomous, collaborative agents that can act, reason, and work alongside people across the enterprise,” said Carl Kinson, UK&I CTO, DXC Technology, in the original report. The company said it is embedding Agents and Agents Frameworks into core operations to help clients adapt. [1]
Retailers expect agentic AI to alter how consumers discover, compare and purchase products, with an emphasis on tighter linking of customer apps, loyalty data and in‑store experiences. The original report quotes Mike Fantis, VP Managing Partner, DAC Group UK, who envisages opt‑in data enabling targeted in‑store alerts and more personalised sales assistance, while also predicting accelerated use of agents in eCommerce for research, list‑making and automated purchasing. Bain & Company and other market research indicate substantial consumer uptake in product research via generative AI, even as roughly half of shoppers remain cautious about fully autonomous purchases. [1][6][7]
Adoption, however, is uneven. A Fluent Commerce report shows that while over 70 percent of retailers have piloted or partially implemented agentic AI to boost efficiency, only 8 percent have completed full deployments and only 5 percent consider their systems mature. Retailers face ethical and regulatory concerns, data integration hurdles and skills shortages that will slow universal rollout even as firms race to reconfigure offers that serve both human shoppers and shopping agents. According to the original report, meeting consumer expectations for convenience will force brands to optimise customer service across channels. [2][1]
Large consumer‑facing firms are already investing in agentic strategies. Retail giants have publicly announced plans for multi‑agent platforms that promise to unify experiences for shoppers, staff, suppliers and developers. The company said these “super agents” are intended to become primary engagement channels and to drive e‑commerce growth, underscoring how leading retailers are hedging on agentic architectures to capture shifting customer behaviour. [4][1]
The rise of agentic AI is prompting a fundamental security rethink: identity and intent will become primary controls as machine actors are granted privileges previously reserved for people. “During 2026, we’ll see identity‑first security move beyond users and devices to include APIs, machine identities, and AI agents,” Matt Rider, Global VP of Customer Technical Support, Exabeam, said in the original report. Security specialists warn that each agent will require its own identity, privileges and monitoring to limit compromise, and that organisations that fail to modernise identity stacks risk critical visibility gaps. Analyst research suggests agentic AI will also support security teams by automating routine tasks and improving threat detection, partly offsetting talent shortages. [1][5]
Identity providers stress that new attack patterns will target the human‑agent relationship. “As AI agents become part of daily workflows, a new threat is emerging: the agent‑in‑the‑middle,” Andre Durand, Founder and CEO, Ping Identity, said in the original report. He added that proving “who or what did it, under what policy, and with whose consent” will define digital trust going forward, and that governance systems able to validate and revoke permissions for both humans and AI entities will be decisive. Security commentators recommend unified governance capable of tracking, validating and revoking permissions as a core defence. [1]
Despite clear momentum, analysts caution that meaningful impact will depend on governance, consumer trust and infrastructure readiness. Gartner and market reports project rapid growth in agent integration across enterprise apps and significant commercial upside, but current maturity metrics and consumer scepticism suggest a multi‑year transition rather than overnight replacement. The company and consulting firms advise organisations to prioritise identity‑centric controls, data‑integration work, and customer service improvements that make their offerings resilient to both human and agentic interactions. [3][2][6]
📌 Reference Map:
- [1] (IT Brief) – Paragraph 1, Paragraph 3, Paragraph 4, Paragraph 6, Paragraph 7, Paragraph 8
- [3] (Gartner) – Paragraph 2, Paragraph 9
- [5] (TechRadar , cybersecurity) – Paragraph 2, Paragraph 7
- [2] (TechRadar , Fluent Commerce) – Paragraph 5, Paragraph 9
- [6] (Bain & Company) – Paragraph 4, Paragraph 9
- [4] (Reuters) – Paragraph 6
- [7] (Forbes) – Paragraph 4
Source: Noah Wire Services
Noah Fact Check Pro
The draft above was created using the information available at the time the story first
emerged. We’ve since applied our fact-checking process to the final narrative, based on the criteria listed
below. The results are intended to help you assess the credibility of the piece and highlight any areas that may
warrant further investigation.
Freshness check
Score:
7
Notes:
The narrative references a Gartner press release from August 26, 2025, predicting that 40% of enterprise applications will feature task-specific AI agents by 2026. ([gartner.com](https://www.gartner.com/en/newsroom/press-releases/2025-08-26-gartner-predicts-40-percent-of-enterprise-apps-will-feature-task-specific-ai-agents-by-2026-up-from-less-than-5-percent-in-2025?utm_source=openai)) This press release was updated on September 5, 2025. The article also cites a TechRadar piece from October 2025 discussing the rise of agentic AI in cybersecurity. The earliest known publication date of substantially similar content is August 26, 2025. The narrative appears to be based on a press release, which typically warrants a high freshness score. However, the inclusion of updated data alongside older material may justify a higher freshness score but should still be flagged. The narrative does not appear to be republished across low-quality sites or clickbait networks. No discrepancies in figures, dates, or quotes were identified. No similar content was found more than 7 days earlier.
Quotes check
Score:
8
Notes:
The narrative includes direct quotes from Gartner’s Anushree Verma and other industry leaders. The earliest known usage of these quotes is in the Gartner press release dated August 26, 2025. No identical quotes appear in earlier material, indicating that the quotes are original. No variations in quote wording were found. No online matches were found for the quotes, suggesting they are potentially original or exclusive content.
Source reliability
Score:
9
Notes:
The narrative originates from IT Brief, a reputable UK-based technology news outlet. The primary sources cited include Gartner, a well-known research and advisory company, and TechRadar, a reputable technology news website. These sources are considered reliable and authoritative in the technology sector.
Plausability check
Score:
8
Notes:
The narrative discusses the integration of AI agents into enterprise applications, a topic covered by multiple reputable sources, including Gartner and TechRadar. The claims made are consistent with information from these sources. The language and tone are appropriate for the region and topic. The structure is focused and relevant, without excessive or off-topic detail. The tone is formal and consistent with typical corporate or official language.
Overall assessment
Verdict (FAIL, OPEN, PASS): PASS
Confidence (LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH): HIGH
Summary:
The narrative is based on a recent Gartner press release and includes original quotes from industry leaders. The sources cited are reputable and the claims made are consistent with information from these sources. The language, tone, and structure are appropriate, with no significant issues identified.
