Kore.ai has launched a new version of its enterprise AI platform aimed at helping large organizations build and manage AI agents “more quickly and securely”.
The company says the platform – called the Kore.ai Agent Platform Artemis edition – is designed to allow businesses to deploy complex AI systems in days rather than months, while maintaining strict governance and oversight.
The platform launches initially on Microsoft Azure and is intended for large enterprises that want to move AI from experimental pilot projects into full-scale operational use.
Kore.ai says the system introduces several new technologies intended to simplify the creation and management of multiple AI agents working together.
Among them is something called Agent Blueprint Language, or ABL, which the company describes as a standardized language for defining how AI agents behave, interact, and are governed.
Another component, called Arch, is described as an AI “architect” that can convert business goals written in plain language into production-ready AI agents.
The company also unveiled what it calls a “dual-brain architecture”, which combines AI reasoning systems with more predictable rule-based workflows in an effort to make enterprise AI systems more reliable and auditable.
Raj Koneru, CEO and founder of Kore.ai, said enterprises are entering a new phase of AI adoption where trust, governance, and operational control are becoming increasingly important.
“Enterprise AI is entering its third wave, where governance, observability, and trust define success at scale,” said Koneru.
“The Kore.ai Agent Platform reflects this shift by bringing an AI-native architecture to market that enables enterprises to build, manage, and optimise multiagent systems with confidence.”
The platform is aimed at organizations running large-scale operations in sectors such as banking, healthcare, insurance, retail, and telecommunications. Kore.ai says the system includes compliance and security features such as SOC 2, ISO 27001, GDPR compliance, and support for private cloud or on-premises deployment.
Stephen Boyle, corporate vice president of enterprise partner solutions at Microsoft, said the partnership is intended to help enterprises operate AI systems more safely at scale.
“Enterprises are moving agentic AI from experimentation to operations, and that shift requires a foundation built for production,” said Boyle.
Kore.ai says the platform integrates with Microsoft products including Microsoft Foundry, Microsoft Agent 365, Entra ID, Microsoft Teams, and the Microsoft Graph API.
The company claims more than 500 Global 2000 organizations already use its AI software for business workflows and customer service operations.
