
Las Vegas isn’t usually where enterprise software history gets made, but Adobe is betting that’s exactly what happened on April 20, 2026. On the main stage at Adobe Summit, the company dropped what it’s calling its biggest strategic shift in years: a new end-to-end agentic AI system named CX Enterprise, designed to sit at the center of how brands manage the entire customer lifecycle.
The pitch is bold. Adobe isn’t just adding AI features. It’s repositioning itself as the orchestration layer, the operating system, for customer experience in the age of AI agents.
And it brought some serious backup. The company announced deep expansions of its partnerships with Amazon Web Services, Anthropic, Google Cloud, IBM, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and OpenAI, plus integrations across major global agencies including Omnicom, WPP, Publicis, and Havas, and system integrators like Accenture, Deloitte Digital, and PwC.
If Adobe pulls this off, it could redefine what enterprise marketing software looks like for the next decade. If it doesn’t, well, Salesforce is right behind it.
What is Adobe CX Enterprise?
From Campaigns to Continuous Orchestration
The core idea behind CX Enterprise is a shift Adobe has been telegraphing for a while but never quite committed to at this scale: moving marketing teams away from episodic, campaign-based execution and toward what the company calls “continuous, intelligent engagement.”
At the center of this shift is a new product called the Adobe CX Enterprise Coworker, and it’s the piece of this announcement generating the most buzz.
The Coworker is fully agentic by design. According to reporting from CMSWire, it’s designed to monitor signals, recommend next-best actions, and execute experiences across channels in real time, all based on defined business goals, with humans kept in the loop throughout.
Here’s a concrete example Adobe provided: if a marketing team sets a goal to increase cross-sell performance by three percent, the CX Enterprise Coworker can pull together the audience segments, creative assets, and performance insights needed to build a targeted offer, create a plan, get human approval, execute the campaign, and track results against that goal automatically.
That’s not a chatbot. That’s an AI that runs marketing operations.
The Partner Play: Why This Announcement Is Bigger Than It Looks
Here’s what separates this announcement from a typical product launch: the partner list.
Adobe isn’t building a walled garden. It’s building a platform specifically designed to plug into the AI infrastructure businesses are already using. The Marketing Agent, one of the core intelligence products inside CX Enterprise, is now generally available inside Microsoft 365 Copilot, and is in beta across Anthropic Claude Enterprise, ChatGPT Enterprise, Gemini Enterprise, Amazon Quick, and IBM watsonx Orchestrate.
Translation: Adobe’s customer experience intelligence is showing up inside the AI tools your teams are already using every day. You don’t have to go to Adobe to get Adobe. That’s a notable strategic shift, and one that MarTech covered closely, noting the platform now supports MCP across its products with reference architectures for Microsoft Copilot, ChatGPT Enterprise, Claude Cowork, and Gemini Enterprise.
On the agency and systems integrator side, the expansion is equally significant. Dentsu, Havas, Omnicom, Publicis, Stagwell, and WPP are all leveraging Adobe’s agentic capabilities to build customized offerings in customer engagement, content supply chain, and brand visibility. And system integrators, Accenture, Capgemini, Cognizant, Deloitte Digital, EY, IBM, Infosys, PwC, and TCS, are packaging these agentic solutions for specific industry verticals.
That’s not a partnership announcement. That’s a distribution network.
| Partner Type | Companies | Role |
|---|---|---|
| AI Platforms | AWS, Anthropic, Google Cloud, IBM, Microsoft, NVIDIA, OpenAI | Interoperability via MCP and A2A protocols |
| Agency Holdcos | Dentsu, Havas, Omnicom, Publicis, Stagwell, WPP | Customized customer engagement offerings |
| System Integrators | Accenture, Capgemini, Cognizant, Deloitte Digital, EY, IBM, Infosys, PwC, TCS | Industry-specific agentic solutions |
| Embedded Surfaces | Microsoft 365 Copilot (GA), Claude Enterprise, ChatGPT Enterprise, Gemini Enterprise, Amazon Quick, watsonx Orchestrate (beta) | Native access to Adobe Marketing Agent |
The NVIDIA Angle: A Play for Regulated Industries
One partnership in particular stands out. Adobe announced a collaboration with NVIDIA to integrate the NVIDIA OpenShell secure runtime and NVIDIA Nemotron open models into CX Enterprise. As CMSWire reported, this combination is specifically positioned toward regulated industries, think financial services, healthcare, and government sectors where governed agents aren’t optional, they’re required.
That’s a smart move. While everyone else is chasing the enterprise marketing buyer, Adobe is quietly building a lane for industries that need auditability and compliance baked in at the infrastructure level.
What About Brand Visibility in AI Search?
One of the most forward-looking announcements at Summit 2026 was Adobe’s acknowledgment of a problem most CX leaders haven’t fully solved yet: how do you show up accurately when an AI agent is doing the searching on a customer’s behalf? Adobe appears to be building tooling specifically around this challenge, what CX Today described as a solution for brand visibility in AI-driven discovery environments.
If you’ve been following the AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) space, you already know why this matters. AI-powered search and discovery is rapidly changing how customers find and evaluate brands. Adobe’s move here signals that the enterprise CX stack is starting to catch up to what forward-thinking marketers have already understood: traditional SEO isn’t enough anymore.
The Hard Question: Will Enterprises Actually Adopt This?
Not everyone is convinced adoption will be smooth. As MarTech noted, enterprise customers are not universally enthusiastic about autonomous AI agents. Unpredictability and governance are emerging as top concerns, with significant pushback around the levels of agentic autonomy organizations are being asked to accept.
This is the central tension in the agentic AI market right now. The technology is ready. The workflows, governance frameworks, and organizational structures that need to support it often aren’t. CMSWire’s analysts put it bluntly: adoption isn’t blocked by tech, it’s stalled by outdated operating models that can’t support continuous engagement.
Adobe seems aware of this. The Coworker concept is explicitly human-in-the-loop, and the platform emphasizes auditability throughout. Whether that’s enough reassurance for enterprise buyers will become clear as CX Enterprise moves toward general availability in the coming months.
The Bigger Picture
Adobe just made its biggest strategic bet in years. CX Enterprise isn’t a product update, it’s a fundamental repositioning. Adobe wants to be the orchestration layer that sits above every AI platform, every agency workflow, and every customer touchpoint.
The partnership list is impressive. The technology is real, the Adobe Experience Platform Agent Orchestrator already powers over one trillion experiences annually. And the market timing is right: agentic AI is moving from experiment to deployment across enterprise marketing teams worldwide.
The risk is execution. Building a true multi-agent orchestration platform that works seamlessly across AWS, Anthropic, Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI simultaneously, while keeping governance robust enough for regulated industries, is an enormously complex engineering and partnership challenge.
But Adobe has 20,000-plus global brands already built on its platform. It has the distribution. It has the data. And now, apparently, it has the ambition to match.
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FAQs
What was announced at Adobe Summit 2026?
Adobe announced Adobe CX Enterprise, a new end-to-end agentic AI system for customer experience orchestration. Key components include the CX Enterprise Coworker (a goal-driven AI orchestrator), expanded integrations with AWS, Anthropic, Google Cloud, IBM, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and OpenAI, and new agency partnerships with firms including Omnicom, WPP, and Publicis.
How does Adobe CX Enterprise differ from Adobe Experience Cloud?
Adobe has effectively rebranded and re-architected Adobe Experience Cloud as CX Enterprise, with agentic AI at the core rather than as a feature. The new platform is built on Model Context Protocol (MCP) and Agent2Agent (A2A) open standards, enabling it to interoperate with third-party AI platforms, a significant shift from Experience Cloud’s more closed architecture.
Is Adobe CX Enterprise Coworker available now?
The Coworker was unveiled at Adobe Summit 2026 in April and is expected to be generally available in the coming months. Some underlying Adobe AI agents, including those for site optimization, audience creation, and journey orchestration, are already in production and being used by 1,770-plus entitled customers.
How does Adobe CX Enterprise relate to AEO?
Adobe’s announcement signals a significant development for AEO practitioners. The platform includes capabilities specifically designed to address brand visibility in AI-driven discovery, the challenge of ensuring a brand appears accurately when AI agents conduct searches on behalf of customers. As agentic AI reshapes how customers discover brands, enterprise CX platforms like Adobe CX Enterprise are building tooling to help brands optimize for this new reality.
Which agencies are partnering with Adobe on CX Enterprise?
Six major global agency holding companies are partnering with Adobe on CX Enterprise: Dentsu, Havas, Omnicom, Publicis, Stagwell, and WPP. System integrators including Accenture, Capgemini, Cognizant, Deloitte Digital, EY, IBM, Infosys, PwC, and TCS are also packaging Adobe’s agentic capabilities for enterprise clients.