Companies deploy AI agents that perceive environments, reason through options, and execute tasks with minimal human input.
These agentic workflows move past fixed rules. AI systems now adapt to real-time changes in dynamic settings. Businesses integrate them into core operations, from marketing campaigns to risk assessments.
Foodora uses tools like BrazeAI for customer engagement. Thomson Reuters applies agentic AI in legal and tax processes. Platforms from OpenAI, Microsoft, IBM, and Automation Anywhere enable natural language design of these systems.
In healthcare, agents handle predictive analytics. Manufacturing sees them in quality control. Finance relies on them for fraud detection.
Metro Atlanta firms advance this trend. Equifax in Alpharetta hires AI engineers to build autonomous agents and multi-agent systems using agentic workflows. Local events such as the 3rd Annual AI & Automation Summit in September 2025 focus on agentic AI and orchestration.
Southern Company and Sysco are present at these gatherings on intelligent automation. Atlanta AI firms such as HatchWorks AI and Sparq help businesses integrate these tools. Georgia’s Office of Artificial Intelligence explores them through its Innovation Lab.
– Equifax job postings specify agentic workflows for fintech applications.
– Summits draw leaders from the technology and supply chain sectors.
– Consulting partners support nonprofits and small businesses with low-touch implementations.
Teams gain capacity as agents coordinate tasks in the background. Real-time data flows support ongoing adjustments.
Businesses in Atlanta can explore agentic workflows to automate repetitive workflows. Westside Data Solutions offers implementation guidance, starting with simple automation steps that fit your operations.

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