Kyndryl and Google Cloud created 100 AI agents in 100 days for enterprises

Kyndryl, an IT infrastructure services company, teamed up with Google Cloud to create 100 AI agents in 100 days to accelerate enterprise innovation.

By leveraging Google Cloud’s AI agent development tools, Kyndryl is able to quickly help customers identify agentic AI use cases that will enhance their businesses and move them quickly into production, allowing customers to quickly implement scalable solutions that deliver immediate value to their organizations.

This initiative marks a decisive step in Kyndryl’s broader mission to help enterprises use AI to improve how they work–and to do so with Google Cloud’s leading AI technology.

The partners used Google Cloud’s enterprise AI technology including Vertex AI Agent Builder, Agentic Development Kit (ADK) and the Agentspace platform.

“Our collaboration with Kyndryl is helping enterprises rapidly move from AI concepts to tangible business results,” said Yateendar Bollini, Managing Director of Global Consulting Partnerships, Google Cloud, in a statement. “Leveraging the power and scalability of Vertex AI, Kyndryl is building sophisticated agents that solve real-world problems and are already driving impact for customers globally.”

The 100 agents aren’t theoretical tools or lab-bound experiments. They are real, scalable and already embedded in production environments across industries and continents. From optimizing supply chains to accelerating medical imaging analysis and streamlining IT operations, these domain-specific agents are delivering measurable impact.

Real Use Cases, Real Business Value

  • Supply Chain Optimization (Singapore): A global manufacturer now uses AI agents to automate workflows and reduce costs.
  • Logistics (Vietnam SuperPort™): AI-driven automation now handles X-ray image analysis and document validation to boost throughput and accuracy.
  • Hospitality (Frasers Hospitality): Transforming training content into interactive, multilingual learning tools for global knowledge sharing.

These deployments are powered by Kyndryl’s AI Innovation Lab in Liverpool, which leads global development and delivery of agentic AI solutions.

“We’re working with our partners to design AI agents to solve industry-specific challenges — whether that’s intelligent observability, proactive incident management, or smarter forecasting and planning,” said Giovanni Carraro, SVP of Global Strategic Alliances at Kyndryl.

Publicly traded Kyndryl spun out from IBM in November 2021 when IBM separated its managed infrastructure services business. The company is valued at about $6 billion.

Kyndryl helps large enterprises design, build, manage, and modernize their critical technology systems. It focuses on keeping the most mission‑critical IT running — from data centers and cloud platforms to network, mainframe, and cybersecurity infrastructure — and increasingly provides AI- and automation‑driven services to improve resilience, performance, and efficiency.

In this work, New York-based Kyndryl works closely with Google, Microsoft, and AWS to bring solutions to customers spanning banking and financial services, healthcare, telco, manufacturing, governtments and more.

Kyndryl said its continued AI growth comes on the heels of strong Q1 FY 2026 earnings that reinforce a strategic focus on scalable AI services.

Kyndryl’s collaboration with Google Cloud is helping bring advanced AI to life.  The companies are working together to develop AI agents that can think, act and adapt in real-world business environments. These agents are built on Google Cloud’s infrastructure and supported by Kyndryl’s expertise in enterprise systems, making them capable of handling complex tasks across industries.

This progress builds on Kyndryl’s broader AI momentum, including the launch of its Agentic AI Framework, a purpose-built orchestration platform that enables enterprises to scale adaptive, self-learning AI agents across complex IT environments—whether on-premises, in the cloud, or hybrid architecture. In addition to several other core AI moments this year, including:

  • Liverpool AI Innovation Lab: Opened in May 2025 at the Royal Liver Building, this lab provides a dedicated hub for exploring AI-driven transformation, software engineering, and applied use cases with enterprise customers.
  • Singapore ASEAN AI Innovation Lab: Launched in June 2025, this regional lab houses approximately 50 AI professionals focused on supporting Southeast Asian enterprises with secure, responsible AI deployment.

Dean Takahashi

Dean Takahashi is editorial director for GamesBeat. He has been a tech journalist since 1988, and he has covered games as a beat since 1996. He was lead writer for GamesBeat at VentureBeat from 2008 to April 2025. Prior to that, he wrote for the San Jose Mercury News, the Red Herring, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, and the Dallas Times-Herald. He is the author of two books, "Opening the Xbox" and "The Xbox 360 Uncloaked." He organizes the annual GamesBeat Next, GamesBeat Summit and GamesBeat Insider Series: Hollywood and Games conferences and is a frequent speaker at gaming and tech events. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.