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31.10.2025
3 Minuten
In today's Cloud Wars Minute, I unpack how Microsoft is
empowering business users with new Copilot agents that simplify
app creation and workflow automation — no coding needed.
Highlights
00:11 — Microsoft has launched a series of new
agents for Microsoft 365 Copilot customers in the Frontier
Program: App Builder and Workflows, designed to accelerate the
creation of AI-driven apps and workflows. These agents make it
incredibly easy for general business users to utilize natural
language in order to create apps, workflows, and even additional
agents.
00:46 — The Workflows agent allows users to
automate tasks such as email, mail apps, and calendar management
across Outlook, Teams, SharePoint, Planner, and other services
like Approvals. Steps of the automation are displayed in real
time and follow the same Copilot conversation, making it easy to
add more or edit existing workflow steps.
01:24 — In a blog post, Charles Lamanna,
President of Business and Industry Copilot at Microsoft, outlined
a use case for these new agents: "Imagine you're preparing for a
product launch with a few multi-turn interactions. Create an app
for a product launch process where teams can track launch
milestones, assign tasks, and view campaign progress in a
dashboard."
01:37 — "Send a Teams update every Monday with
upcoming launch deadlines and key tasks from Planner. Post
reminders for approval deadlines in Teams channels. Build an
agent that answers product launch questions like: “What’s the
next milestone?”, “How do I submit creative assets?”, or “When is
the launch event?”, using SharePoint resources and Teams
conversations."
02:08 — Regarding Microsoft's strategy for
Copilot: step one involved integrating Copilot everywhere to
ensure easy access and increasing familiarity. Step two was the
launch of Copilot Studio Lite, which allows any user to build
agents easily. Now, step three is focusing on finding the
off-the-shelf agents available to make complex tasks such as app
development and workflow automation seamless.
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30.10.2025
6 Minuten
In today's Cloud Wars Minute, I compared the diverging strategies
of SAP and Oracle as the AI revolution reshapes enterprise tech.
Highlights
00:22 — SAP versus Oracle. It was interesting on
SAP's recent Q3 earnings call: the financial analysts seemed to
be really preoccupied with this notion — was SAP going to get
into the hyperscale business? Or was the fact that Oracle is in
the cloud infrastructure business something that SAP sees as a
disadvantage? I think those are entirely the wrong questions.
01:00 — SAP is never going to go in that
direction. Where SAP's future is — and what CEO Christian Klein
kept coming back to over and over, and I believe very
persuasively — is it's all about the data, and AI, and agents,
and the way that apps are evolving to pull all of that together.
It's about the business data cloud. It's about certain
partnerships.
01:45 — It reported a 22% increase in cloud
revenue, but in constant currency, that was 27%. Its current
cloud backlog was up about 27%. So, strong numbers for them —
much, much faster than Oracle's apps business is growing. But
Oracle thinks it is going to be ahead on the AI front, and with
the database, infrastructure, and its vertical market apps, it
thinks it's going to have a real case to be made here.
02:27 — But from SAP’s side, Klein was asked
about the hyperscale business. Really? His point was: no, no, no,
this is not going to happen. Instead, we're going to double down
— triple down — at SAP on the things that we do best and that our
customers are looking for us to deliver.
03:44 — A big point that Klein made about this —
and why he's so confident about SAP's ability as he said, we are
seeing more and more that the buying decisions are being made
around business outcomes. That's the focus. Certainly, the CIO is
involved, but the decisions are moving up into the C-suite and
the boards of directors.
05:08 — I think the competitive dynamics between
SAP and Oracle are going to really intensify over the next two or
three years because the opportunity here around the AI
Revolution, with agents, AI data, and applications, is incredibly
big and powerful.
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29.10.2025
24 Minuten
Bonnie Tinder is the founder and CEO of Raven Intelligence, an
independent B2B peer review site that amplifies the voice of the
customer. She focuses on software customers, consulting partners,
and software vendors and helps identify the best partners for
their needs. In this episode, she shares powerful insights from
leading organizations on how AI is being used not to replace
employees, but to enhance experiences, streamline operations, and
drive better business outcomes through purpose-driven,
human-centered deployment strategies.
Episode 56 | Human-Centered AI Strategies
The Big Themes:
Augments, Not Replaces Humans: AI should
enhance the human experience, not eliminate it. Real-world
examples, such as Marriott’s use of AI to improve the check-in
process, demonstrate that AI can remove operational friction
and allow frontline staff to focus on hospitality and customer
engagement. In the energy sector, utilities are embedding AI
into safety systems to make work more accurate and proactive.
These examples show that the most successful AI deployments
begin by identifying pain points in human workflows.
Cultural Readiness Is Crucial for AI Success:
AI adoption is not just a technical project; it is a cultural
transformation. Multiple examples made it clear that even the
most advanced tools can fail without the right introduction.
One university CHRO compared AI implementation to sneaking
vegetables into meals. By avoiding technical jargon and
focusing on small improvements, they saw stronger adoption.
People often resist what they do not understand, especially
when it feels like a threat. Leaders who frame AI as a tool for
reducing stress, reclaiming time, and increasing impact are
more likely to succeed.
AI Should Start with Outcomes: Real AI value
begins with the business goal, not the technology itself.
Companies that succeed with AI are the ones that begin by
identifying the result they want to achieve. Whether it's
streamlining hotel check-ins, reducing safety risks in energy
infrastructure, or accelerating clinical breakthroughs,
effective strategies start with specific problems. These
companies ask their teams where the friction lies, and then
choose tools to fix those issues. This is a shift from a
technology-first mindset to an outcome-first mindset.
The Big Quote: “I hope you know business people will all start to
get to the point of like, yes, the nature of work is going to
change. But AI is not going to spell doom and gloom for every
worker on Earth. It's going to give many, many, many of them an
opportunity to do better things."
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29.10.2025
2 Minuten
In today's Cloud Wars Minute, I unpack Microsoft AI’s push for
empathetic AI with new features designed to make Copilot more
relatable and engaging.
Highlights
00:18 — Microsoft has launched the Mico 1
character — a visual presence that appears and interacts with
users when they tap into Copilot's voice mode. Now, this
cloud-like entity is optional and actively listens, reacts, and
even changes color in response to the direction of the
conversation. The aim is to give Copilot a friendly face and make
interactions more natural.
00:59 — Mustafa Suleyman, CEO of Microsoft AI,
said the following: “When we started talking about this idea of
an AI companion a few years ago, it seemed distant and uncertain.
Now it's real. It's here. We can't wait for you to feel the
difference.” In a press release, Microsoft stated that Copilot is
designed to be empathetic and supportive rather than sycophantic.
01:32 — Now, I can't ascertain whether Microsoft
has truly delivered the AI companion of pop culture fame — think
HAL 9000 without the murderous intent. However, personalization
and natural interaction have become their mission in recent
months, and Mico is certainly an important piece of the puzzle.
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28.10.2025
5 Minuten
In today's Cloud Wars Minute, I dive into how ServiceNow is
redefining enterprise automation with its new AI Experience
platform.
Highlights
00:15 — ServiceNow has for a long time been
intriguing in the way that it does not necessarily map to or
compete directly against lots of the other major Cloud Wars Top
10 companies. ServiceNow has gone a different sort of route,
everything they're doing from AI and workflows. The company has
taken another big step with a service they introduced recently
called the AI Experience.
00:56 — I had a chance earlier this week to
speak with ServiceNow's President, Chief Product Officer and
Chief Operating Officer, Amit Zavery. Now, one of the big things
that Zavery said is: "Look, just as customers got sort of over
the hump of saying, okay, I've got to integrate all my
applications and my databases and my systems now along comes AI."
01:28 — A concern among customers has been
there's going to be lots of new pieces, and the customer is going
to be stuck in the middle again. Amit said that a key point here
is it [AI Experience] ties together these different data types,
voice, images, data, text, and everything from the people, the
data and the workflows that are happening around the company.
02:28 — Amit further said: "What we want to try
to do here is this automation, happening with AI end-to-end,
across company." So, it's not just the processes, but how the
company works up and down, across the organization, and with
customers and with suppliers. He said: "We're trying to ensure
that customers can use AI to cut technical debt, rather than add
to it."
03:13 — Another big point about this was,
there's lots of productivity, lots of innovation here again. He
said: "Trust has never been more important." He said that the AI
Experience, in tandem with the AI Control Tower from ServiceNow,
is going to give customers the ability to feel very comfortable
that they understand they're on top of where these AI deployments
are happening.
04:28 — And he talks about how ServiceNow being
very open in this platform. He said: "We're finding new ways to
work with the other big tech companies to ensure that customers
get what they want, and that we're not forcing customers to,
again, get into that big game of integration. We want more
innovation and less integration."
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Über diesen Podcast
Cloud Wars analyzes the major cloud vendors from the perspective of
business customers. In Cloud Wars Live, Bob Evans talks with both
sides about these profoundly transformative technologies, and with
monthly All-Star guests from across the business community about
the trends impacting how the world lives, works, plays, and dreams.
Visit https://cloudwars.com for more.
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