The center of gravity in enterprise AI has shifted from chat to agents — systems that take multi-step actions, call tools, and connect to the software teams already use. The promise is real, but so is the risk of wiring an unreliable system into your operations.
What an agent really is
An agent is AI that does more than answer: it retrieves information, calls tools and APIs, and completes multi-step tasks — ideally with checkpoints where a human stays in control. The useful ones are narrow and reliable, not general and flashy.
Where it pays
- Workflow automation. Connecting AI into existing systems so work flows through, instead of stopping at a chat window.
- Multi-step research and drafting. Tasks that span several sources and steps.
- Triage and routing. Classifying, summarizing, and routing work to the right place.
The failure mode is autonomy without guardrails. Reliable agents are scoped tightly, evaluated continuously, and keep a human in the loop where the stakes are high.
Adopt deliberately
Agents raise the bar on evaluation and governance because they act, not just answer. Start narrow, prove reliability, then expand — and choose a platform whose agent capabilities fit (see choosing the right vendor). Adoption still decides the return — see pilot to production.
Start with an AI Audit.
Adopt agents without the chaos
Celadon designs scoped, evaluated, human-in-the-loop agent systems that connect to your stack — starting with an AI Audit.
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