No Enterprise AI Without Process Intelligence: ROI, Edge Models, and a New AI Infrastructure Era

No Enterprise AI Without Process Intelligence: ROI, Edge Models, and a New AI Infrastructure Era

AI and process intelligence

AI adoption is accelerating, but leaders are under pressure to prove measurable ROI. At Celosphere 2025, the central message is clear: enterprise AI only unlocks its full value when it understands the context of how work actually gets done. As Celonis co founder and co-CEO Alex Rinke puts it, AI without process intelligence is at risk of becoming an internal social experiment rather than a capable engine for real business improvement.

Celosphere is built around bridging pilots and production by focusing on measurable ROI. Industry analysts paint a challenging backdrop: Gartner finds board attention to AI is high, yet meaningful financial returns are elusive for many firms. Against that backdrop, Celonis argues that process intelligence — the living digital twin of operations — is the differentiator that turns data into action and, ultimately, value at scale.

Forrester’s Total Economic Impact study cited by Celonis shows a 383 percent ROI over three years for organizations that align AI with process improvement, with payback in roughly six months. In tangible terms, some users have seen sales order automation rise from 33 percent to 86 percent, unlocking tens of millions in benefits through faster automation and clearer process visibility. The takeaway is straightforward: modernizing legacy systems and tying AI to real workflows accelerates returns and sustains gains.

Beyond the numbers, Celosphere spotlights how enterprises are starting to run AI agents in production, coordinated by the Celonis Orchestration Engine. The shift from AI as advisor to AI as actor demands robust governance and context rails to prevent agents from duplicating actions or missing critical steps. This orchestration layer is presented as essential to keeping automation coherent when agents operate across people, systems, and data in real time.

Tariffs and supply chain shocks are no longer abstract risks but operational realities. Real-time visibility into how policy changes ripple through procurement, logistics, and compliance helps firms navigate disruption rather than be overtaken by it. Case studies highlight how PI-enabled workflows have helped companies like Smurfit Westrock optimize inventory amid tariff uncertainty and how ASOS has intensified supply chain efficiency without compromising customer experience.

As Celonis frames it, platform-first thinking beats point solutions. The company argues that process intelligence should underpin the entire enterprise stack, delivering a digital twin that continually updates and informs analysis and execution. Open APIs and an expanding partner ecosystem — including The Hackett Group, ClearOps, and Lobster — are part of a broader push toward interoperable automation that transcends vendor lock-in and unlocks leaner, more resilient operations.

In parallel with process-centric strategies, the industry is moving toward edge-first AI. IBM’s Granite 4.0 Nano, touted as the smallest AI model to date, targets edge and on-device use cases, proving that intelligence doesn’t have to live solely in the cloud. On the infrastructure side, AWS has unveiled a dedicated AI supercomputer designed to power Anthropic’s Claude, signaling a move toward scale that enables more capable agents and deeper collaboration between models and users. Taken together, these developments suggest a future where process intelligence serves as the glue that makes AI robust, predictable, and scalable across the enterprise.

The overarching takeaway from Celosphere, IBM, and AWS is crystal clear: there is no enterprise AI without process intelligence. A foundation built on open, orchestrated, process-aware platforms is what turns abstract models into repeatable business value and a reliable engine for continuous improvement.

Sources

  1. Inside Celosphere 2025: Why there’s no ‘enterprise AI’ without process intelligence
  2. IBM Releases its Smallest AI Model to Date
  3. AWS Launches AI Supercomputer, Powering Anthropic’s Claude
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