PwC India has expanded its partnership with AI startup Leah to help organisations adopt agentic AI across their operations and move beyond early-stage AI experiments.
Announced on May 28, the collaboration combines PwC India’s consulting expertise with Leah’s Agentic OS platform, which is built to manage, coordinate, and govern AI agents across enterprise systems.
The companies said the goal is to help businesses shift from isolated automation projects to larger AI-driven operating models where humans and AI agents work together more effectively.
A key focus of the partnership will be the deployment of industry-specific AI agents trained for particular business functions, workflows, and operational requirements. These AI agents can be customised for different sectors and integrated into existing enterprise processes.
The alliance will also emphasise governance, transparency, and security. Organisations will be able to deploy AI solutions in cloud environments or within their own infrastructure while maintaining oversight, audit trails, and compliance requirements.
Manpreet Singh Ahuja, Partner and Chief Clients and Industries Officer at PwC India, said businesses are now moving from testing AI capabilities to implementing them at scale. He noted that the next phase of enterprise AI growth will depend on agentic systems that understand industry-specific processes and can operate within complex business environments.
According to Ahuja, the partnership will help organisations introduce AI into functions such as finance, human resources, and supply chain management while maintaining enterprise-level governance and security standards.
Leah said its Agentic OS platform is designed to help enterprises achieve faster business outcomes by coordinating AI agents across data sources, workflows, and business systems. The platform also supports requirements such as traceability, human supervision, and auditability.
Sarvarth Misra, CEO and Co-founder of Leah, said businesses will gain the greatest advantage from AI-native platforms built around agentic architectures rather than simply adding AI features to existing software.
As part of the collaboration, the companies plan to integrate agentic AI workflows into existing enterprise applications, including ERP, procurement, finance, and operational systems, instead of creating separate standalone platforms.
The announcement reflects a broader shift in the enterprise AI market, where organisations are increasingly focused on deploying AI at scale with stronger governance, better orchestration, and measurable business outcomes across core operations.
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