DXC Technology Launches Global AI Engineering Unit to Build Mission-Critical Enterprise Systems
The new unit will operate within its Consulting & Engineering Services (CES) organisation and bring together more than 11,000 engineers globally under a unified engineering-led operating model.
DXC Technology has launched DXC Engineering, a new global business unit to help enterprises design, deploy and scale AI-powered products and software systems across regulated and mission-critical industries.
The company said the new unit will operate within its Consulting & Engineering Services (CES) organisation and bring together more than 11,000 engineers globally under a unified engineering-led operating model. DXC’s broader CES division includes over 40,000 professionals across 70 countries.
The launch comes as enterprises increasingly move AI projects from experimentation into production, creating demand for partners capable of integrating AI into complex, legacy and multivendor technology environments where reliability and security are critical.
“The moment is now for customers to turn AI ambition into operational reality. DXC Engineering is more than a construct. It's a signal to the market and to our customers that we are elevating the importance of our IP – both human and digital.
“As AI moves from experimentation to production, customers need partners who can take accountability for designing, building and operating intelligent systems at scale, especially in environments where failure is not an option,” said Ramnath Venkataraman, DXC Technology President, Consulting & Engineering Services.
DXC Engineering will focus on industries including automotive, financial services, telecom, healthcare, energy and defense. The company said the division combines AI-native software engineering, proprietary platforms and industry-specific delivery accelerators built on its Xponential AI orchestration framework.
In automotive, DXC highlighted capabilities in connected vehicle platforms, autonomous driving technologies and software-defined vehicle systems through its AMBER platform. In financial services, the company will support AI integration across capital markets, wealth management and banking systems.
DXC said its engineering platforms already support more than 50 million vehicles globally and manufacturing systems managing over four million production points worldwide, positioning the new division to capitalise on growing enterprise demand for AI-driven operational systems.