Dive Brief:
- AWS is investing $1 billion into a dedicated forward deployed engineering organization that combines its frontier teams, composed of software engineers, with AI agents to build and deploy AI systems within a customer’s environment, the cloud giant shared in a Tuesday announcement.
- The AWS FDE model is designed to be agentic-first, meaning that while pods of five to six human engineers will work within a customer’s organization initially to compress deployment timelines, the goal is for AI agents to continue running in a business environment long-term to support continued innovation, said Francessca Vasquez, VP of frontier AI engineering and services, at AWS.
- AWS’ approach targets end-to-end business workflows and is “rewiring our last mile of deployment,” Vasquez told CIO Dive. “We see this as the next evolution of where customers are looking to drive even more value through agents,” she said.
Dive Insight:
As enterprises scale AI across their environments, companies such as AWS, Google and Microsoft are heavily investing in FDE programs to help customers address adoption pain points.
Google Cloud earlier this year listed job postings for 59 engineering roles to fill an AI-focused unit in the company’s go-to-market team. Meanwhile, Accenture in March shared plans with Microsoft to launch a forward deployed engineering practice.
AWS FDE’s approach combines human engineering skills with AI agents. The FDE team will use agentic deployment technology, letting AI power projects with humans in the loop. As projects advance, customer engineers will work with the AWS team on creating workflows so that after the FDE organization departs, they will be able to continue on their own with the help of AI agents that will stay on, according to AWS.
“We definitely see a differentiator in our execution of FDE in being able to bring the power of both human expertise alongside agents in very short, compressed timelines, 45-day sprints, as a way to help our customers accelerate value,” Vasquez told CIO Dive.
A core component of the effort includes a semantic layer deployed into customers’ AWS accounts, which will connect to enterprise data sources and use AI to publish a structured web of data called a knowledge graph, which AI agents will reason from to create long-standing expertise living in customer’s code, the announcement said.
AWS customers including Cox Automotive, the NBA and the NFL are already tapping into the AWS FDE organization resource.
The NFL partnered with AWS FDE to build new customer-facing features including NFL Fantasy AI and NFL IQ alongside their tech teams in weeks, Gary Brantley, CIO of the NFL, said in the announcement.