Global IT majors Infosys, Cognizant, Accenture, and LTIMindtree have pledged a combined investment exceeding $1.5 billion to accelerate adoption and development on Oracle’s newly launched AI Data Platform. The funding will support large-scale training programs, R&D, and the creation of over 100 industry-specific AI use cases across sectors, including manufacturing, utilities, financial services, and healthcare.
Oracle said the initiative will also train more than 8,000 practitioners globally, positioning the platform as a central hub for enterprise-grade AI adoption.
The AI Data Platform integrates data, analytics, and generative AI into a unified framework, connecting business data with AI models and workflows. It also leverages NVIDIA’s GPU-powered infrastructure to deliver high-performance computing for complex workloads.
“By unifying data and simplifying the entire AI lifecycle, Oracle AI Data Platform is the most comprehensive foundation for enterprises to harness AI with confidence, security, and agility,” said TK Anand, executive vice president, Oracle, at the company’s AI World 2025 event.
Among its partners, Infosys termed the platform a top strategic priority. Executive vice president Dinesh Rao said the company is building GenAI and Agentic AI solutions through its Topaz offering and will expand investments in Oracle’s AI stack, following its $140 million R&D spend in FY25.
Cognizant, which announced a $1 billion AI investment last year, called the platform a strategic component of clients’ AI transformation journeys. Senior vice president Naveen Sharma said the company will train over 1,000 associates and develop 50 agentic AI use cases over the next two years.
Meanwhile, Accenture, already investing $3 billion in AI, is embedding Oracle’s technology into its AI Refinery, which runs on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. “This advancement will allow clients to unlock the full value of Oracle capabilities from day one,” said Eric Brown, managing director at Accenture.
LTIMindtree expects to generate close to $200 million in revenue from the Oracle AI data platform in the coming years. It also plans to train more than 1,000 experts to support enterprise rollouts. “AI pilots often stall because of siloed data and poor integration. Oracle’s platform addresses that by uniting governance, analytics, and AI in one solution,” said Newin Durai, executive vice president and global head of Oracle Services at LTIMindtree.
Oracle said the collective effort marks a significant step toward creating a standardised foundation for enterprise AI, aiming to simplify integration, improve data governance, and scale real-world deployments across industries.
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