The Enterprise Cloud Index makes one point clear. AI innovation is accelerating faster than enterprise readiness.
Imagine this scenario.
A company launches an AI-powered chatbot to reduce customer service wait times.
The tool promises faster answers and happier customers.
But within weeks, problems appear.
The AI tool pulls outdated product data.
Another department deploys a different AI assistant without IT approval.
Customer responses vary across channels.
Customers notice the inconsistency. Trust drops.
Behind the scenes, the real problem is not AI.
It is fragmented infrastructure and disconnected teams.
This scenario is becoming common across enterprises globally.
The latest findings from the Nutanix Enterprise Cloud Index (ECI) highlight a growing reality:
AI adoption is accelerating innovation—but also exposing gaps in enterprise infrastructure, governance, and collaboration.
For CX and EX leaders, these gaps directly affect experience delivery, trust, and operational agility.
The Enterprise Cloud Index (ECI) is a global research report that tracks enterprise cloud adoption, infrastructure modernisation, and AI readiness.
The latest study from Nutanix, conducted with Wakefield Research, surveyed 1,600 cloud, IT, and engineering leaders across 14 markets, including India.
For CX teams, the report matters because:
When infrastructure fails, customer journeys break.
AI applications require scalable, portable infrastructure. Containers provide that foundation.
Containers package applications and dependencies together.
They allow software to run consistently across environments.
According to the report:
Containers allow enterprises to deploy AI workloads faster.
They also improve reliability and scalability.
As Lee Caswell, SVP of Product and Solutions Marketing at Nutanix, explains:
“Organisations need enterprise-grade security, resilience, and portability as AI workloads can run anywhere.”
For CX leaders, this infrastructure shift matters because:
Without containerisation, these experiences become difficult to scale.
Silos between IT and business teams slow AI execution and create operational complexity.
The report reveals a striking insight:
85% of Indian executives say organisational silos make technology execution difficult.
This fragmentation creates multiple problems:
According to Faiz Shakir, VP & Managing Director India & ASEAN at Nutanix:
For CX leaders, siloed operations often lead to:
Breaking silos is therefore not just an IT challenge.
It is a customer experience imperative.
Shadow AI refers to AI tools or agents deployed by employees without official IT oversight.
The report highlights a rising concern:
These risks include:
For example, imagine a marketing team using an unofficial AI tool to generate customer communications.
If that tool:
The organisation faces reputational and regulatory risk.
Shadow AI grows when employees feel innovation barriers within IT processes.
The solution is not restriction alone.
It requires structured governance frameworks.
AI agents automate decision-making, task execution, and interactions across digital ecosystems.
The ECI report shows strong enterprise optimism:
AI agents are already transforming several CX scenarios:
AI agents can:
AI copilots help employees:
However, these benefits depend heavily on data access and infrastructure maturity.
Without unified platforms, AI agents struggle to function effectively.
Data sovereignty refers to regulations requiring data to remain within specific geographic boundaries.
In the survey:
For CX leaders, this matters because customer data fuels:
When data residency rules restrict data movement, companies must redesign infrastructure strategies.
Hybrid multicloud environments often become the solution.
Platforms like those from Nutanix help organisations run applications across on-premises systems and cloud regions while maintaining compliance.
Many enterprises are accelerating AI adoption, but infrastructure readiness remains limited.
The ECI findings reveal a major gap:
This gap creates several CX risks:
| Infrastructure Gap | CX Impact |
|---|---|
| Legacy systems | Slow response times |
| Fragmented data platforms | Inconsistent personalisation |
| Limited compute capacity | AI model latency |
| Lack of governance | Trust and compliance issues |
In short, AI ambition often exceeds infrastructure capability.
Several strategic insights emerge from the report.
1. AI adoption is now infrastructure-driven
Customer experiences depend on scalable compute environments.
2. Containers are becoming the backbone of AI-enabled CX platforms
They enable faster deployment of AI features.
3. Governance must evolve alongside innovation
Shadow AI threatens data security and brand trust.
4. Silos remain the biggest barrier to AI transformation
Technology alone cannot solve organisational fragmentation.
5. Data sovereignty will shape future experience architectures
Infrastructure location matters as much as capability.
As AI adoption accelerates, CX leaders often fall into several traps.
AI must integrate with existing journey orchestration systems.
Experience teams must partner closely with infrastructure leaders.
AI policies must include data usage, model oversight, and security controls.
Fragmented data produces inconsistent experiences.
CX leaders can use a simple four-layer framework.
Modernise platforms using containers and hybrid cloud environments.
Unify customer data across CRM, analytics, and support systems.
Define policies for:
Deploy AI agents across customer touchpoints:
When these layers align, organisations achieve scalable AI-powered experiences.
Containers allow AI workloads to run consistently across environments, improving scalability, reliability, and deployment speed.
Shadow AI can expose sensitive data, create compliance violations, and produce inconsistent AI outputs.
Silos prevent collaboration between IT and business teams, slowing AI deployment and fragmenting customer experiences.
Customer data must often remain within specific regions to meet regulatory requirements and protect privacy.
Most organisations are not fully prepared. Many still rely on legacy systems that cannot support large-scale AI workloads.
AI adoption is accelerating across industries.
But technology alone will not define the winners.
The organisations that succeed will build secure, scalable, and collaborative foundations for AI-driven experiences.
As the Enterprise Cloud Index from Nutanix makes clear, the next era of customer experience will depend on infrastructure as much as innovation.
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