惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
腾讯CDC
V
V2EX
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
A
About on SuperTechFans
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
C
Check Point Blog
博客园 - 【当耐特】
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
K
Kaspersky official blog
Security Latest
Security Latest
H
Help Net Security
博客园_首页
美团技术团队
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
博客园 - 司徒正美
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
G
Google Developers Blog
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
爱范儿
爱范儿
I
Intezer
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
P
Privacy International News Feed
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
雷峰网
雷峰网
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
W
WeLiveSecurity
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
I
InfoQ
The Cloudflare Blog
F
Full Disclosure
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium

informationweek

2026 tech company layoffs How Sedgwick scaled AI in legacy claims workflows InformationWeek Podcast: CTOs on using AI in regulated spaces How top CIOs are measuring the real ROI of IT automation What AI must learn from Roosevelt, conservation and 1929 Experian's chief innovation officer gleans AI gains with startup collab ETS CIO on competing with AI startups 'running with scissors' Before the next VMware: How CIOs prepare for vendor shocks The strategic alignment powering cyber-resilient organizations The AI infrastructure bottleneck is becoming a CIO problem InformationWeek Podcast: CTOs on reining in rogue AI agents Workplace equity in the age of AI Why and how to implement an AI asset rationalization strategy Why companies are shifting toward private AI models AI agents in automation: When to build, when to buy Navan CTO AI on trial: The Workday case that CIOs can The AI infrastructure boom is coming for enterprise budgets How CIOs can manage LLM costs: A practical guide What CIOs miss when buying vertical SaaS software InformationWeek Podcast: How CTOs balance AI and their teams Whirlpool, Duke Energy, Cleveland Clinic CIOs on scaling AI Where CIOs get stuck rebuilding the enterprise: What 'Rewired' reveals As AI makes projects harder to track, will CIOs need new controls? Why disaster recovery plans fail in geopolitical crises A silent erosion of enterprise AI by data poisoning Priceline CTO prioritizes engineers able to 'hold a room and a roadmap' InformationWeek Podcast: When CTOs need to restart IT projects Wayfair CTO maps agentic path across digital and brick-and-mortar commerce The AI contract gaps the Google-Pentagon deal just made visible Non-human identity sprawl is agentic AI's real risk Anthropic's Mythos forces a rethink of vulnerability management Outsourcing contracts weren't built for AI. CIOs are renegotiating now The AI spend hangover companies didn't plan for The power of CIO networking in the competitive AI world Why CIOs see AI projects stall: Speed without structure kills scale IT leaders should never let a good crisis go to waste SFO's digital twin maps airport operations from the curb to takeoff CIOs caught in the middle as AI startups disrupt vertical Saas Submit an IT Leadership column to InformationWeek Podcast: Rightsizing AI frameworks to avoid failure modes The invisible labor crisis inside IT: AI work the org chart can't see Why AI teams treat training data like capital Ask the Experts: How CIOs can identify and overcome cultural barriers to innovation Nobody told legal about your RAG pipeline -- why that's a problem Meta's new 'AI Zuckerberg' is a mirror for every C-suite Will the music stop for AI's funding dance? Rethink tech talent: Local is the smartest play for IT InformationWeek Podcast: Catching errors in AI-powered code CIOs can combat talent scarcity with AI-augmented leadership -- Gartner How Bellevue, Wash., is applying AI to streamline a broken permitting process Ignore the hype: Smarter tech bets at speed of change Who controls the fix? Colorado's repair fight tests CIO power Ask the Experts: The red flags that signal an AI project isn't worth pursuing The hidden high cost of training AI on AI Red Hat's Marco Bill: Resource control is key for AI sovereignty InformationWeek Podcast: New IT architecture, cloud, edge and AI Enterprises need Tier 1 provider relationships to deliver on AI How CIOs run and rebuild the business at the same time in the AI era It's not your tech stack, it's your structure -- fix it Confidential computing resurfaces as security priority for CIOs FinOps: Helpful tool, or a cloud control placebo for CIOs? Cleveland's open data overhaul: From sticky notes to public dashboards As Microsoft expands Copilot, CIOs face a new AI security gap Why build vs. buy doesn't fit modern IT systems InformationWeek Podcast: Is quantum computing slumbering? Your AI vendor is now a single point of failure Vibe coding: Speed without security is a liability A practical guide to controlling AI agent costs before they spiral AI fuels a new wave of technical debt The sunsetting of Sora: A hard lesson in AI portfolio resilience HP pushes broad internal AI use after early productivity gains Why value-based pricing is inevitable InformationWeek Podcast: Safeguarding ecosystems from outsiders Why AI scaling is so hard -- and what CIOs say works Humans are the North Star for AI-native workplaces -- Gartner How IT leaders build a culture for what comes next Compliance costs risk widening the AI gap AI-driven layoffs add new demands on CIOs to prove value AI transformation: Early wins are not enough for CIOs Why CIOs can't let users wait on IT Memory shortage doesn't have to spell disaster for IT budgets Accelerate AI adoption: 3 reasons for adopting MCP How techno-nationalism is complicating IT resilience and supply chains for CIOs InformationWeek Podcast: Compliance crackdown on AI and BYOD Why enterprise AI initiatives keep dying before production Metrics of meaning: What do we really measure in AI? Techno-nationalism is reshaping CIO infrastructure strategy Using AI to pick team leaders -- without crossing legal or ethical lines What Oracle's layoffs reveal about running IT with fewer people Chief AI Officer on course-correcting when AI moves too fast Large enterprises need high-performing networks to scale AI InformationWeek Podcast: When do smaller AI models make sense? The future belongs to AI-driven IT Ways AI supercharges risk awareness and data insights for CIOs How automation prepares you for agentic NetOps Should the CIO, CFO or CEO hold the kill switch on AI? The CIO's new mandate: Redesign work itself Ask the Experts: CIOs say they wouldn’t pull workloads back from the cloud How AI is Reshaping the Enterprise
Workday’s AI reset: Agents and the race to remake SaaS
2026-03-17 · via informationweek
Myles Suer,

CIO Analyst and Tech Journalist

March 17, 2026

6 Min Read

Workday has experienced significant change over the past several months as financial markets have digested the impact of agentic AI on the entire enterprise SaaS landscape. Workday, once the upstart innovator that helped pioneer cloud software for HR and finance, finds itself redefining the SaaS model it helped popularize. 

Concerns about disruption have prompted Workday to make a leadership change, reposition its business strategy and to more clearly articulate what AI can -- and cannot -- do. 

As I've noted before, the market increasingly believes the SaaS industry -- including system vendors such as Oracle, SAP and Workday -- is being reshaped by AI, particularly agentic AI. The concern is that these AI technologies could reduce customer reliance on subscription-based software. Clearly, as AI-native, industry-specific startups enter the marketplace, competitive pressure is only intensifying. Investors worry that AI agents, by replacing some human labor, will also reduce the dollar value of SaaS subscriptions. They also point to the rise of AI-powered "vibe coding" tools, which could reduce the dependence on traditional enterprise applications.

Related:Zero-click hack exposes flaw in Orchids vibe coding platform

The question becomes whether systems of record retain a unique and enduring value and whether software economic models will change over time. It is this market analyst's opinion that systems of record combined with world-class agentic AI can create a sustainable business advantage if executed correctly. It is also unlikely that vibe coding can replicate and maintain what exists in today's systems of record. 

Nevertheless, market perceptions of instability have helped drive Workday's market cap lower. Clearly, there is also uncertainty in the marketplace about whether Anthropic and OpenAI will be long-term partners -- or challengers -- for enterprise application vendors.

Against this backdrop, on February 9, Workday Co-founder Aneel Bhusri returned as CEO and chair, replacing Carl Eschenbach, who stepped down. Founder returns are rarely accidental -- they typically signal a strategic reset, and indeed Bhusri takes the reins of a company repositioning itself in a new AI-centric landscape. 

"We're now entering one of the most pivotal moments in our history. AI is a bigger transformation than SaaS -- and it will define the next generation of market leaders," Bhusri said at a virtual press event March 12. A key part of his job is to strategically reposition Workday as an AI winner, he explained. 

The company has rebranded itself as an enterprise AI platform for managing people, money, and agents. Supporting that effort is the company's acquisition of Sana AI, an AI company developing agentic AI technology, enterprise knowledge tools and learning platforms. 

Combined with Workday's systems of record, Sana AI is helping Workday make the transition into what the company called an agentic world of work. 

Messaging: Workday is 'agentified' via Sana

With the combination of Workday and Sana, Workday argues that HR and ERP platforms remain mission-critical systems of record capable of processing transactions with absolute accuracy and speed. This includes the ability to enforce complex security models and comply with regulatory and statutory requirements across multiple countries. Workday believes this level makes systems of record extremely difficult to replicate with AI-generated applications. 

However, agentic AI is a game-changer. 

Workday is clear that AI will change how workflows are created within Workday, how the platform is consumed and the value customers ultimately get from it. 

Bhusri said Workday has entered a new chapter. With the addition of Sana, Workday can once again be an innovation and thought leader, he said. 

To explain the shift, Bhusri drew a distinction between legacy enterprise software and AI. He said that legacy Workday systems are deterministic. Meanwhile, AI is probabilistic. 

The opportunity, he argued, is to combine enterprise apps that run corporate processes with an AI reasoning engine. It is not meant to replace the system of record -- the opportunity is additive, not a substitution.

What agents could mean for Workday 

To prove this point, Workday showed examples of its agents and their potential business impact. 

The company said agentic HR can fill open roles in days, autonomously run HR processes, and effortlessly make policy changes. Meanwhile, agentic finance can route work between agents, continuously execute quarterly-close tasks, make planning a daily function, and govern spend in real time. 

Bhusri believes that adding agentic AI will drive finance organizations that are still on legacy on-premises systems to SaaS -- because AI needs to be done in the cloud. While Sana AI continues to solve broader sets of agentic AI processes, Workday has embedded Sana in its platform to create Workday-native agents. 

Workday also demonstrated self-service agents designed to reduce support tickets for HR and IT teams. 

For example, Workday showed how an agent could create an expense report from email receipts. In another case, an agent created and managed the employee onboarding process. Agents can automatically provide access to a newly recruited team member or add them to the regular meetings lists. 

But these agentic updates are a prelude to bigger changes. Workday said its agentic AI deployments could eventually make its platform the last piece of software new employees need to learn, as AI agents handle tasks across many systems behind the scenes. 

From subscription to consumption 

One of the big changes brought about by the shift from on-premises applications to SaaS delivered models was the move from buying software as capital -- via licenses -- to treating it as an operating expense through subscriptions. This dramatically changed how software was sold and how value was measured. 

Workday is now flipping its business model with the help of Sana. And this will matter to CIOs, who will have to explain this shift to their organizations. 

Instead of subscriptions, Workday is moving to a consumption model. Here, the economics shift to the business outcome model. To make this work -- and again this will matter to CIOs – Workday is moving to a flex-credit model, where organizations use credits only as they achieve economic value. 

For existing customers, this usage-based outcome model will obviously be a shift over time. Similar to the transition from on-premises to cloud, both customers and investors will need time to catch up with the implications of this change. 

Can SaaS vendors execute fast enough? 

Markets have it right that agentic AI is creating a tectonic shift for vendors and customers. 

For years, software vendors have struggled to prove ROI from their software. But if agents take on repetitive work, the value may become clearer and easier to measure. 

However, this will require that systems-of-record vendors, like Workday,  seize the moment -- acquiring what they are missing and integrating it at warp speed. 

In many respects, the Sana AI deal resembles a reverse acquisition. And for this acquisition to work for customers, Workday will need to retain key Sana leadership -- which can be tricky to do after a lockup period, when founders and early leaders are now rich. 

So the markets may be partially correct in questioning whether traditional SaaS vendors can make this transition fast enough, and CIOs need to be ready to re-evaluate their SaaS purchases based on measurable business outcomes rather than traditional subscription value.

Get more IT leadership updates and insights three times a week direct to your inbox with the InformationWeek newsletter.

About the Author

Myles Suer

CIO Analyst and Tech Journalist

Myles Suer is a CIO analyst and tech journalist. Recognized by Leadtail as a top CIO influencer, he is the former leader of #CIOChat, a global community connecting CIOs and senior technology leaders. His insights have been featured in publications such as CMSWire, CIO.com, VKTR, and Cutter Business Technology Journal. Suer frequently reviews books on AI, technology, and business strategy from leading publishers, including Harvard Business Review Press, MIT Press, and Columbia University Press. Additionally, he serves as research director at Dresner Advisory Services.