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If Part 1 was about the why now, Part 2 is about the how. The Microsoft AI Tour highlighted the new ‘frontier phase’ of AI adoption. Historically shaped by groups that learned to self-organise, were pragmatists with the tools at hand, and moved forward without guarantees, the frontier mindset is now emerging inside organisations adopting AI at scale. Here’s what it looks like in practice.
Nicole McKinley’s (Microsoft) “Customer Zero” session landed because it was specific. Rather than talking about AI as an abstract capability, she walked through repeatable patterns: pick a role or workflow, remove the obvious friction, measure the lift, then expand with sponsorship and change management.
Several examples stood out:
What tied these together was the operating model. AI was framed as an amplifier of judgement, rather than a replacement for it. Adoption was treated as a product discipline: feedback loops, iteration, and deliberate normalisation of AI in day‑to‑day work.
Even if these reported results ran at single rather than double digits, the net impact on an organisation the size of Microsoft is formidable.
On the floor | Pavel Neuzil
“The practical demos were the standout for me. PowerApps ‘spec‑to‑solution’ experiences can compress app delivery from months to days by proposing architecture and building on Dataverse. In Dynamics, prebuilt agents plus voice + CRM could remove a huge amount of manual meeting prep and pipeline admin. And for developers, GitHub Copilot can analyse legacy apps, remove dead code, suggest improvements, even act as a ‘rubber duck’ to surface ambiguity before you build.”
Pavel Neuzil, Head of Internal Applications, Brennan
With a recent Deloitte survey showing 69% of Australian organisations are already using agentic AI, adoption is no longer the question. Control is. One challenge is moving from fragmented experimentation to managed capability without slowing down team momentum.
What’s emerging is a split between two pronounced patterns:
The organisations getting this right — what Microsoft refers to as Frontier Firms — are finding a path between the two: enabling usage early, then layering in governance in a way that doesn’t disrupt momentum.
In our work with Australian enterprises, we’re seeing this balance become a clear differentiator between organisations experimenting with AI and those translating it into repeatable, enterprise value.
Across the sessions, a few consistent patterns stood out:
Scott Woodgate’s (Microsoft) security session was a useful counterbalance. As models improve, attackers and defenders both gain leverage. AI compresses the time between vulnerability discovery and exploitation, which means baseline security hygiene matters more, not less.
Two ideas stood out:
1. Controls must apply to agents as well as people
In one demo, data labels and DLP policies prevented an agent from accessing “secret” PO details and blocked it from emailing sensitive content externally. The principle was clear: if a human isn’t allowed to do it, neither is an agent.
2. Use agents to fight the volume problem in security
Security Copilot agents were positioned to reduce toil and surface what actually matters. Cited results from controlled studies included:
The broader message: AI adoption and security maturity have to move in lockstep.
This is a remarkable era. The organisations winning are combining experimentation with discipline: clear outcomes, strong guardrails, and learning loops that compound over time. That’s the frontier‑firm mindset. And the name is fitting.
Thriving in frontier environments is about self‑organisation, self‑reliance, and the courage to act without guaranteed outcomes. Agentic AI is bringing a new frontier closer, raising the premium on judgement, responsibility, and leadership across organisations.



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