Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) has partnered with chipmaker AMD to help enterprises turn artificial intelligence from small pilot projects into large-scale, real-world deployments.
The collaboration was announced on January 14 from Mumbai and Santa Clara, bringing together TCS’s experience in systems integration and industry-led transformation with AMD’s computing and AI hardware capabilities. The two companies are targeting areas such as generative AI, hybrid cloud infrastructure, high-performance computing, and AI-enabled digital workplaces, where many organisations are still struggling to move beyond experimentation.
Focus on Turning AI Experiments Into Enterprise-Scale Deployments
Under the partnership, TCS and AMD will jointly build AI and generative AI solutions tailored to specific industries. These offerings are intended to help enterprises modernise older technology systems, strengthen cloud and edge environments, and speed up the adoption of AI across day-to-day operations.
As part of the agreement, TCS will train and certify its employees on AMD’s hardware and software platforms. Both companies also plan to invest in building skilled teams that can design, implement, and scale advanced AI systems for global customers.
Industry-focused generative AI frameworks will be developed for sectors such as life sciences, manufacturing, and banking and financial services. These frameworks will support use cases including drug research, smart manufacturing, quality engineering, and intelligent risk and compliance management.
TCS CEO and Managing Director K Krithivasan said the partnership is focused on helping enterprises move past trial phases and deploy AI in meaningful ways. He said the combination of TCS’s domain expertise and AMD’s high-performance computing technology would allow organisations to scale AI solutions with greater confidence, while also supporting TCS’s long-term goal of becoming a global leader in AI-driven technology services.
AMD Chair and CEO Dr Lisa Su said enterprises need strong and open computing foundations as AI adoption continues to grow. She added that working with TCS would help customers turn AI-led innovation into sustainable business growth across industries.
From a technology perspective, TCS will use AMD Ryzen-based client systems to support digital workplace transformation. AMD EPYC processors, Instinct GPUs, and AI accelerators will be deployed to modernise hybrid cloud and high-performance computing environments. AMD’s embedded computing portfolio, including adaptive system-on-chips and FPGAs, will also be used for edge AI, inference workloads, and industrial digitalisation.
TCS said its background in building enterprise solutions on advanced semiconductor platforms aligns well with AMD’s product roadmap. This alignment will allow both companies to co-develop AI and computing solutions that are built for enterprise-scale deployment.
Overall, the partnership is intended to give organisations a clearer and more practical path to using AI across cloud, data centre, and edge environments, as companies increasingly look to move generative AI from concept to daily operations.











