If AI agents are the future of work, Globant wants to be the company that puts them in every employee’s hands. The digitally native consultancy today unveiled Globant Enterprise AI 2.0, its upgraded AI platform headlined by a new module called The Station.
The Station is pitched as a one-stop shop for AI agents—a marketplace-meets-workbench where anyone in an organization, from developers to business analysts to HR staff, can browse, share, and deploy agents without heavy technical expertise.
According to Gastón Milano, CTO at Globant Enterprise AI, the goal is to remove friction from adoption: “The agentic AI market is growing fast, and many enterprise users are unsure how to access the best tools. The Station solves this by being the one-stop shop to find, deploy, and use AI agents.”
The Agent Economy, Simplified
The module launches with more than 50 Globant-certified agents, covering industries from finance to healthcare to retail. That pre-built library is meant to accelerate discovery and cut down on the proof-of-concept phase that bogs down many enterprise AI rollouts.
A few clicks, Globant says, is all it takes to orchestrate and deploy agents. That’s a sharp contrast to the usual sprawl of frameworks and integrations. The Station is also designed to complement client-built agents, turning the platform into both a showroom and a workshop.
Built for Interoperability
Enterprise AI 2.0 doesn’t stop at in-house tools. It supports Model Context Protocol (MCP) and Agent-to-Agent (A2A) communication, letting companies import and interconnect agents from external ecosystems including Agentforce, Google Cloud Platform, Azure AI Foundry, and Amazon Bedrock. In other words, Globant isn’t asking customers to rip out existing AI investments—it’s trying to unify them.
Why It Matters
Agentic AI—the idea that autonomous or semi-autonomous agents can reason, retrieve data, call APIs, and complete tasks—is emerging as the next frontier of enterprise AI. But adoption is fragmented, with most companies experimenting in silos.
Globant is betting that a centralized, secure hub can help enterprises scale AI beyond pilots and into everyday workflows. By lowering the barrier for non-technical employees, The Station could also foster the kind of cross-department innovation enterprises say they want but rarely achieve.
Positioning for the Long Game
Globant has long pitched itself as the partner for “digital reinvention.” With Enterprise AI 2.0, the company is signaling that it wants to be seen not just as an integrator, but as a platform player in enterprise AI adoption.
The release also emphasizes security, compliance, and control, key themes for CIOs wary of shadow AI projects popping up across their orgs. By putting discovery and deployment into one interface, Globant is essentially offering a “golden path” for enterprises looking to scale AI responsibly.
The question now is whether enterprises—many already juggling offerings from Microsoft, Google, AWS, and Salesforce—will buy into yet another platform, or whether Globant’s agent-focused approach can carve out a unique role in the ecosystem.
For organizations struggling to get from AI pilots to enterprise-wide impact, The Station could be the missing link.
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