Microsoft recently announced that it is investing $2.5 billion into a new business division called Microsoft Frontier Company. This new company is aimed at helping enterprise clients implement and scale AI systems.
Microsoft’s Frontier Company is deploying 6,000 engineers, consultants and industry specialists to work directly with customers on designing, launching and improving AI systems tied to measurable business outcomes.
Judson Althoff, CEO of Microsoft’s commercial business, explained in a blog post companies need two items to succeed with AI: a platform where their own proprietary data, expertise and workflows accumulate and improve over time regardless of which underlying models they choose, and a separate governance layer that lets them monitor, control and secure AI systems across their tech stack while tracking return on investment through financial operations practices.
Bridging the two, he said, requires deep engineering and industry expertise capable of continuously refining how AI agents handle business processes, so that a company’s proprietary intelligence keeps compounding and translates into measurable results.
“This is what Microsoft Frontier Company was built to do: focus on end-to-end Frontier Transformation, enabling customers to amplify their IQ with AI while refining their differentiated value in the markets that they serve”, he said.
Althoff noted the platform will let organisations run AI models from OpenAI, Anthropic, Microsoft’s own AI unit, open-source projects or specialised industry models, without being locked into any single provider.
Rodrigo Kede Lima, who has led Microsoft’s business in the Americas and Asia over six years at the company, serves as president.
The announcement lands several days after Amazon Web Services stated it would commit $1 billion to its own forward-deployed engineering initiative to support fast-paced AI engagements, underscoring how quickly cloud rivals are racing to match each other on AI implementation support.
Central to the pitch is the commitment customer data and intellectual property will not be used to train models in ways that erode their competitive advantage.
Early deployments include work with London Stock Exchange Group to embed AI search capabilities into its Workspace platform, alongside engagements with Land O’Lakes, Unilever and Novo Nordisk.
Microsoft is also working with systems integrators including Accenture, Capgemini, EY, KPMG and PwC to extend the approach globally, according to Althoff.
Source: Mobile World Live
Image Credit: Microsoft
Source: Tahawul Tech

