U.S. companies have an AI problem. Indian IT wants to be the solution
Indian IT companies are positioning themselves to address the AI deployment challenges faced by U.S. firms. With a significant percentage of AI pilots failing due to integration issues, these companies aim to leverage their experience with legacy systems to bridge the gap. However, this shift also poses risks to their traditional revenue streams as automation technologies evolve.
- ▪95% of AI pilots fail due to flawed integration and a lack of organizational readiness.
- ▪Indian IT firms like Tata Consultancy Services and Infosys are looking to implement AI at scale for U.S. clients.
- ▪The shift towards AI orchestration puts Indian IT companies in competition with major consulting firms like Accenture and Deloitte.
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Global U.S. companies have an AI problem. Indian IT wants to be the solution As firms find ROI elusive, India’s tech giants are betting they can fill the AI “deployment gap” for U.S. clients, before automation eats their own back-office business. Rest of World/Getty Images Rest of World/Getty Images By Itika Sharma Punit 27 May 2026 India’s IT giants seek to shift from back-office tech automation to AI orchestration, challenging consulting giants like Accenture, Deloitte, and McKinsey.A 2025 MIT Media Lab report found 95% of AI pilots fail due to flawed integration, and a massive gap between tech and organizational readiness.Indian IT firms hope to leverage their deep knowledge of legacy systems to bridge the deployment gap.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Rest of World.