- CX Enterprise is an “end-to-end” platform for customer lifecycle management
- Marketers anticipate they will need five times more content in the next two years
- Openness extends to the choice of models and the integration of the partner ecosystem
This year at its annual summit conference, Adobe introduced the new CX Enterprise system, which it describes as an end-to-end agent solution for managing the entire customer lifecycle.
With CX Enterprise, Adobe puts customer acquisition, engagement, conversion, and loyalty in one place, powered with AI-induced productivity aids.
What the company hopes to do with CX Enterprise is encourage companies to adopt end-to-end fully agent operations, rather than using AI in isolated use cases, which can often present operational challenges in terms of silos and do not necessarily yield the best productivity results.
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CX Enterprise brings agent AI to the entire customer lifecycle
At its core are two core architectural components: an agent AI system that combines agents, reusable workflows in the form of skills, and MCP endpoints; and a base layer with real-time data and customer profiles through Adobe Experience Platform.
Speaking on stage at the event, David Wadhwani, president of Creative Business and Productivity, highlighted some of the challenges advertisers face: content must stand out even as volume increases; Businesses need to stay fresh and ROI declines as quickly as it comes; consumers want more personalized content; and all of this must happen ultra-fast without missing the mark.
To give businesses a fighting chance, CX Enterprise addresses brand visibility in a world of AI-powered discovery (as if SEO wasn’t enough of a challenge), offers a unified system for real-time personalized journeys, and also connects to the content supply chain through Adobe GenStudio. Perfect for the 5x increase in content demand that marketers anticipate over the next two years.
But in an effort to reach users where they already are, the company is committing to a sense of openness that’s not typical of big tech, offering access to more than 30 models in addition to its own Firefly models and connecting with companies like Microsoft Copilot, Slack, ChatGPT and Gemini to put all of this detailed, curated marketing data into users’ preferred ecosystems.
In terms of a business decision, it is a smart decision. Working together with other ecosystems avoids the feeling of vendor lock-in that business leaders are increasingly skeptical of, but Adobe knows users will return to it for its powerful Creative Cloud suite of asset generation and editing software; In other words, it is a win-win.
We’re told CX Enterprise is coming “soon.”
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