Chief Executive Officer (CEO) stories
Higher-margin software and services lifted Westcon-Comstor's FY26 sales and profit, with recurring revenue now making up 68% of gross sales.
The move gives the legal AI group a base in three major regional markets as demand rises from firms handling cross-border work.
It follows a seed-funding boost and a rapid roll-out that modernised a 15-year-old aviation application in just over a month.
Broader Claude access should help MIND sharpen data discovery and loss prevention for customers, after it joined Anthropic's cyber scheme.
Smart home makers can now add cameras and doorbells more quickly as Ayla bundles cloud recording, billing and app support into one service.
Advertisers on Threads can now tighten ad placement controls as IAS extends its Meta content block list tool to the feed.
Continuity is at stake as PFU's EMEA unit begins a handover to Yasunari Shimizu after Hiroaki Kashiwagi's five-year tenure.
Strong adoption of AI tools and SaaS+ lifted TechnologyOne to its 17th straight record first-half profit and revenue.
The ranking underscores growing demand for tools that secure human, machine and AI identities across cloud and hybrid environments.
Companies using Claude can now log prompts, responses and attachments for compliance, easing oversight of sensitive data shared by staff.
The refurbished IT hardware supplier will expand under Claudio Christensen as demand grows for cheaper, lower-waste enterprise technology across Europe.
Younger staff are being misread as disengaged, as changing career paths and AI adoption reshape expectations across the workplace.
Members have elected three industry veterans to the board for 2026-27, as GTIA refreshes leadership to guide its strategic direction.
The move comes as AI demand drives Britain's data centre operators to expand faster, secure more power and plan larger sites.
Hundreds of workers will lose jobs as Intuit simplifies its structure and redirects spending towards AI and financial services growth.
The Brisbane IT services group is keeping its brand as it pushes deeper into not-for-profit work after Evergreen's acquisition and Lyra transition.
The tie-up could widen card acceptance and lower fraud risks for overseas shoppers and Chinese merchants as JD.com expands abroad.
Fuel now tops cost pressures for Australian SMEs, but most are still swallowing the rise rather than passing it on to customers.
The move gives customers local support as governments across Asia-Pacific tighten digital tax reporting and e-invoicing rules.
The deal gives the US-backed group a foothold in Australia and adds more than 55 specialists to its portfolio of ERP services.