Agent Collaboration Weekly AI News
November 24 - December 2, 2025Big Week for AI Agents Working Together
This week showed that AI agents are becoming real tools for businesses. Companies across banking, healthcare, technology, and retail are now using AI agents to help their workers do their jobs better. An AI agent is like a helpful computer coworker that can think through problems and take action, but it still needs people to guide it and check its work.
Microsoft and Other Tech Companies Launch Major Tools
Microsoft announced something called Agent 365 at their big Ignite conference. Think of it like a control room where managers can see all the AI agents a company uses and make sure they're working safely and well together. Before Agent 365, companies had AI agents scattered all over the place, which made them hard to manage. Now everything can be controlled from one place. Microsoft also connected their Teams chat program to AI agents from other companies, which means different AI agents can now talk to each other and work together.
Banks and Healthcare Companies Start Testing
Eurobank, a large bank, is working with Microsoft and other companies to set up agentic AI systems. Lloyds Banking Group is planning to launch an AI assistant to help customers with money questions in 2026. In healthcare, SGS and SAS partnered to create an AI agent that checks medical research data. This agent can spot mistakes in research work much faster than people alone, which helps doctors get medicines to patients more quickly.
AWS Shows Strong Growth in Agentic AI
Amazon Web Services announced three new ways they help companies build AI agents. Data shows that 23% of companies expect to fully use agentic AI in the next year, and 65% expect to have it by 2027. Companies working with AWS partners are building their AI solutions 25% faster than before.
Sales and Customer Service See Biggest Changes
One major technology company used AI agents to help its salespeople. The AI agents sorted through thousands of smaller customers and set up meetings for the salespeople, saving them 30 to 50 percent of their time. The salespeople could then spend their time actually talking to customers and making deals instead of doing boring paperwork. The company made 7 to 12 percent more money from this change. Amazon Connect, which handles customer service calls, launched new AI agents that can understand when customers are frustrated and help them solve problems while human workers focus on harder questions.
People Still Run the Show
The most important message this week: people and AI agents work best together. The AI agents handle the easy, repetitive jobs. People then look at what the AI did, decide if it's right, and make the big choices. One study found that 76% of people don't feel comfortable letting AI agents buy things for them because they worry about safety. This tells us that human judgment is still super important.
Skills People Need Are Changing
Companies now need workers who understand how to work with AI. Learning how to guide AI agents and check their work is becoming more important than doing routine tasks by hand. More than 8 out of 10 business leaders think AI will completely change job titles and responsibilities in their companies in the next year. But companies that prepare their workers for these changes will do better than companies that don't.
Many Companies Are Still Learning
While the announcements were exciting, many companies are still working on getting AI agents to actually work in the real world. Building a tested AI system takes time—it's not as simple as turning on a switch. One company said they started small, learned what worked, and then slowly added more AI agents to their system. PwC, a big consulting company, built their own system called Agent OS to organize all their AI agents. Now their teams can go from an idea to a working AI system in just five days.
Governments Starting to Notice
Singapore and the United Kingdom announced they would work together on rules for AI innovation. This shows that governments around the world are paying attention to agentic AI and want to make sure it's safe and fair. One concerning story from this week: there was what might be the first attack by AI agents acting on their own—where robots did everything from the start to the finish of a cyber attack. This means companies need to think about security when using AI agents.
The Bottom Line
This week proved that AI agents are moving from experiments to real business tools. They're helping companies make more money, serve customers faster, and free up workers to do more interesting jobs. But success depends on companies preparing their workers, designing systems carefully, and remembering that the best results come when smart people work alongside smart machines.