There is a moment in every major technology cycle when the early movers stop talking about potential and start reporting results. We have reached that moment with AI.
For IT and consulting leaders, this is both an extraordinary opportunity and a serious test of execution capability. The firms that are winning in this environment are not simply selling AI implementations; they are engineering scalable AI ecosystems for their clients, building custom platforms, and embedding themselves deep into enterprise value chains through outcome-driven partnerships. They are, in a very real sense, turning AI into revenue engines for Fortune 500 companies.
This blog examines what is actually driving that growth, how the consulting and AI transformation services model has had to evolve to keep pace, and what the next two to three years look like for enterprise AI adoption.
IT executives know the game has changed: AI services companies have shifted from endless pilots to production-scale deployments, powering multimodal models, agentic AI, and edge computing at enterprise velocity.
This shift of AI services demands a sector lens. Healthcare leaders leverage AI for early diagnostics, like predictive models that flag treatment risks weeks ahead. Fintech giants deploy fraud prevention via real-time risk modelling, while manufacturing optimizes predictive maintenance to cut downtime. Retail thrives on demand forecasting and hyper-personalization, boosting margins amid volatile markets.
Key trends amplify this: Multi-agent AI and LLMs automate decisions end-to-end; edge-cloud hybrids deliver low-latency intelligence; and data modernization unlocks ROI through governed pipelines.
Behind the headline numbers are five forces compounding AI’s enterprise value, and every serious IT leader should have a clear perspective on each.
Google secured a multi-million dollar contract with NATO for AI-enabled sovereign cloud services in November 2025.(Source)To remain competitive, companies must adopt the AI services currently utilized by industry leaders.
The consulting model itself has had to transform. Advisory-only firms are losing ground to those with end-to-end delivery capability.
The progression has been linear but has accelerated sharply: from advisory to implementation to AI-as-a-Service (AIaaS), where firms maintain, monitor, and continuously improve AI systems as a managed service. The firms that have completed this transition are capturing recurring revenue and building relationships that are difficult to displace.
The “AI factory” model is particularly significant: repeatable, cross-functional delivery units with standardized toolchains and pre-built accelerators that spin up new AI programmes in weeks rather than months. Metrics of success have shifted accordingly, from project delivery timelines to AI-enabled business outcomes: fraud loss reduction, model accuracy improvement, and incremental revenue from AI-driven personalization. Clients are structuring contracts around these outcomes, which requires partners to have deep confidence in their delivery capability.
As an example of AI moving from manual decision support to automated, always-on intelligence at enterprise scale, a large-scale hybrid analytics platform was built on Google Cloud for a global retailer, enabling data scientists to run hundreds of ML algorithms across customer journeys, segmentation, and loyalty. The platform processes 250 TB of data weekly and reduces processing time on computation-intensive jobs by 70%. (Source)
The ROI potential is concentrated in three domains: automation of high-volume cognitive work, hyper-personalization that increases customer lifetime value, and decision systems that improve the speed and quality of consequential choices in underwriting, procurement, and clinical care.
The obstacles are real. Data privacy compliance across GDPR, CPRA, and a growing patchwork of international frameworks remains the most cited barrier to scaling. Talent gaps in AI engineering and governance are extending timelines for enterprises building internal capability. And ethical AI deployment, following high-profile failures in lending bias and clinical recommendation systems, is now a board-level concern at most large enterprises.
The industry response has coalesced around three things: investment in AI governance platforms that provide monitoring and audit trails; upskilling programmes that build client capability rather than client dependency; and partnerships with domain-specific AI specialists who bring the regulatory and technical depth that general-purpose firms cannot match.
The 2026 landscape is not the destination. This is a pivotal moment. Here is how the next two years are likely to unfold for enterprise AI.
AI will move from augmenting human decisions to making autonomous ones within defined parameters. We’re already seeing this in algorithmic trading and dynamic pricing, and it will expand materially as multi-agent systems mature.
Leading enterprises in 2028 won’t be using AI tools; they’ll be running on AI. It becomes the operating logic: how decisions get made, how value gets delivered.
Sovereign AI is shifting from policy debate to procurement requirement. Regulated enterprises in defence, healthcare, and finance are already mandating private-cloud deployability and data residency controls. The NIST AI Risk Management Framework is fast becoming the baseline standard. (Source)
Microsoft has committed to processing Microsoft 365 Copilot interactions in-country for 15 nations by the end of 2026. This includes Australia, India, Japan, and the UK. This decision responds directly to the demands for enterprise data residency. (Source)
In 2026, AI services aren’t optional; they’re your growth engine. IT and consulting leaders are reaping significant benefits by integrating agentic innovation, governed data, and AIaaS factories to achieve outcomes that redefine value at the billion-scale. Ready to engineer yours?
Partnering with a leading AI services company powering Fortune 500 transformations would be the ideal way forward for enterprises.
What are AI services, and how are they transforming IT and consulting in 2026?
AI services are ready-made or specially designed artificial intelligence applications, algorithms, and models provided by companies to automate tasks, examine data, and create insights. It include data engineering, model development, MLOps, and governance. In 2026, they are moving IT and AI consulting from project-based delivery to ongoing, outcome-based AI initiatives that are revenue and operations-impacting.
How are IT and consulting leaders turning AI into billion-dollar growth opportunities?
By shifting from consulting to AI-as-a-Service, establishing repeatable delivery factories, and shifting outcome-based contracts to revenue outcome, as opposed to project outcome. The movement from implementation to continuous AI stewardship is where compounding revenue really starts.
What role do specialized AI services partners play in scaling enterprise AI solutions?
Specialists like Tredence provide domain-specific AI depth, ready-made accelerators, and compliant MLOps frameworks. These are things most enterprises are unable to build within, and they compress time to value, lower delivery risk, and upgrade discrete AI initiatives to enterprise-wide scalable programmes.


