Our latest State of Software Delivery report analyzed more than 28 million CI workflows and found a pattern that should give engineering leaders pause. Average throughput grew 59% year over year. Main branch activity for the median team declined 7%. Teams are generating more code than ever before. Less of it is reaching production. The cost of poor validation used to show up mostly in developer hours: debugging, blocked deployments, context switching. That cost hasn’t gone away. But there is a second bill now. Every failed build means agent retries. Every slow pipeline is compute burning while an agent waits. Main branch success rates have fallen to a five-year low of 70.8% against a 90% benchmark, and the AI spend attached to every failed cycle is climbing alongside it. The teams doing well are catching failures earlier and keeping their pipelines healthier. They are running the same tools as everyone else. What they have structured differently is where and when validation ha...
Most enterprise AI projects start with retrieval. You connect Jira, Confluence, SharePoint, and Slack. Maybe a few internal databases nobody has touched in five years. You tune embeddings, optimize chunking, wire up a vector database, and convince yourself you’ve built an AI-powered knowledge system. Then the model server crashes. And suddenly, you discover the uncomfortable truth about enterprise AI: The hard part was never retrieval. It was infrastructure. For the past two years, the industry has treated LLM deployment like a feature integration problem. In reality, it is rapidly becoming a platform engineering problem, one involving GPU orchestration, scaling economics, governance boundaries, workload scheduling, observability, and operational resilience. The moment organizations move beyond prototypes, the conversation changes fast. Search Was Never the Product Enterprise search already exists. Most organizations have had it for years. But what teams actually want is synthe...