TLDR: Microsoft India’s COO, Himani Agrawal, highlights a significant shift in enterprise AI adoption, moving from employee-led initiatives to top-down, leadership-driven programs. This change, supported by data from Microsoft’s Work Trend Index 2025 report, indicates that senior executives are now spearheading AI deployment, focusing on tangible business returns despite initial high costs.
Enterprise adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in both India and globally is undergoing a fundamental transformation, with leadership now at the helm of its integration. Himani Agrawal, Chief Operating Officer (COO) for Microsoft India and South Asia, emphasized that AI deployment is increasingly being driven by senior executives and middle managers, marking a departure from earlier employee-led initiatives.
According to Microsoft India’s annual Work Trend Index (WTI) 2025 report, a substantial 80% of Indian business leaders are already familiar with AI agents, compared to 66% of employees. Globally, 79% of leaders believe AI will accelerate their careers, a higher figure than the 67% of employees who share this view. This contrasts sharply with the previous year’s WTI report, which indicated employees as the primary drivers of AI adoption.
Agrawal stated, “When it starts with the leaders, it is serious adoption, it is serious ROI and things which mean business returns. That’s how it gets perceived, conceptualised, and adopted.” She made these remarks during a Microsoft WTI event in Noida, underscoring the critical role of leadership in translating generative AI pilots into full-scale production.
The shift comes amidst an ongoing debate regarding the responsibility for AI tool adoption within organizations. This discussion was recently highlighted by Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong’s decision to dismiss engineers who declined to use AI coding tools, a move that drew criticism for potentially disregarding individual choice.
The WTI 2025 report further reveals that over 59% of Indian business leaders are currently deploying AI agents to automate workflows across teams. An impressive 93% of leaders are expected to implement AI agents to expand workforce capabilities within the next 12 to 18 months. While agentic AI solutions are recognized as the next frontier in AI, they are also compute-intensive and expensive. Addressing concerns about the impact on Microsoft’s bottom line, Agrawal noted, “Any new technology, product, or service comes with high costs when you introduce it on the market. But as you scale adoption, the cost always keeps coming down.”
Also Read:
- Microsoft CPO Highlights AI Agents’ Role in Accelerating Product Development for Indian IT Services
- India’s Agentic AI Startup Boom: Over 100 Companies Emerge Amidst Enterprise Focus and Consumer Adoption Hurdles
Himani Agrawal’s elevation to COO for India & South Asia in April 2025 underscores Microsoft’s commitment to its AI-first strategy, with her role focusing on operational strategy and driving AI integration across the region. Microsoft continues to solidify its position as a global AI leader through its partnership with OpenAI, continuous innovation in tools like Copilot and Azure AI, and a strong commitment to ethical AI development.


