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Microsoft launches $2.5B ‘Frontier Company’ to embed AI engineers directly with enterprise customers

2 min read Editorial

Microsoft has officially launched Microsoft Frontier Company, a new operating business unit dedicated to enterprise-grade AI engineering. The company is committing $2.5 billion to this initiative, aiming to move customers beyond simple experimentation toward measurable business outcomes.

What is Microsoft Frontier Company?

This new organization represents the largest outcome-driven engineering effort in the industry, according to Microsoft Commercial CEO Judson Althoff. It goes beyond traditional Forward Deployed Engineering (FDE) by embedding 6,000 industry and engineering experts directly with customers.

The goal is to co-design, deploy, and continuously improve AI systems at scale. These teams combine deep industry knowledge with change management expertise and technical engineering skills. The focus is on delivering “Frontier Transformation,” a term Microsoft uses to describe the process of amplifying a company’s unique intelligence while protecting its intellectual property.

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A diverse team of engineers and business analysts collaborating around a large digital dashboard displaying data charts
Microsoft is embedding 6,000 experts to co-design and deploy AI systems directly with enterprise clients.

Protecting proprietary intelligence

A core principle of this initiative is data protection. Microsoft emphasizes that customer data, IP, and competitive advantages will not be used to train models in ways that commoditize their unique value. The platform supports a model-diverse, open architecture.

Organizations can run the right model for each specific scenario—whether from OpenAI, Anthropic, Microsoft AI, or open-source providers—without being locked into a single vendor. This approach allows companies to observe, govern, and secure AI solutions across their entire technology stack while using FinOps tools to assess return on investment.

Early results and partnerships

Microsoft cites early successes with major partners including LSEG (London Stock Exchange Group), Land O’Lakes, Unilever, and Novo Nordisk. For LSEG, engineers helped embed AI into the LSEG Workspace, allowing finance professionals to query complex structured and unstructured financial content quickly.

To achieve global scale, Microsoft is working closely with its partner ecosystem. This includes robust FDE partnerships with Global SI partners such as Accenture, Capgemini, EY, KPMG, and PwC.

Leadership

Rodrigo Kede Lima has been appointed President of Microsoft Frontier Company. He brings 30 years of industry experience, including six years at Microsoft leading enterprise-wide transformations in the Americas and Asia. His role involves translating technology shifts into tangible business outcomes through platform innovation and partner collaboration.

Source: The Official Microsoft Blog

Over to you: Do you think embedding engineers directly with clients will help enterprises get more value from AI than self-service tools?

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Windows & Microsoft news editor at 9to5Windows. Covering everything from Windows 11 builds to enterprise updates.