As enterprise AI rapidly evolves from isolated assistants to autonomous systems capable of executing complex business processes, organizations are looking for practical ways to turn AI into measurable business outcomes. In this episode of Cloud Wars Live, Bob Evans speaks with Chris Leone, Executive Vice President of Oracle Applications and AI, Oracle about Oracle’s latest innovations in Fusion Agentic Applications, the new Fusion Builder Experience, and AI Studio Skill. Leone explains how Oracle is combining enterprise applications with AI agents to automate work, empower both business users and developers, and help organizations accelerate AI adoption while maintaining enterprise-grade security and governance.

AI That Delivers Outcomes
The Big Themes:
- Outcome-Driven AI Changes Everything: Oracle’s vision for agentic AI begins with a simple premise: enterprise software should no longer focus primarily on completing tasks — it should focus on delivering business outcomes. Leone explains that Oracle has intentionally designed Fusion Agentic Applications around measurable objectives rather than individual transactions. Instead of asking users to manually coordinate dozens of activities, organizations define a goal, such as reducing supplier spending or shortening inventory lead times, and the application orchestrates the work required to achieve it. Teams of AI agents collaborate, monitor progress, recommend next steps, and increasingly automate execution while keeping humans involved whenever appropriate.
- Autonomous Work Is Gradual: Oracle isn’t advocating for immediate, fully autonomous enterprises. Instead, Leone introduces the idea of an “autonomy dial” that organizations can gradually increase as confidence grows. Initially, AI agents recommend actions while employees remain responsible for approvals and execution. Over time, companies can allow the system to automatically perform more routine work while humans supervise exceptions and strategic decisions. Leone illustrates this using Oracle’s Sourcing Command Center, where customers establish objectives like lowering supplier costs or reducing lead times. The application identifies shortages, creates RFQs, manages supplier auctions, recommends winners, and continuously guides employees throughout the process. As organizations become more comfortable, more of these steps can execute automatically. This phased approach helps customers balance productivity gains with governance, compliance, and trust while steadily reducing repetitive work and allowing employees to concentrate on higher-value business decisions.
- Customers Are Moving Fast: Leone describes Oracle’s customer base as spanning the full spectrum of AI adoption. Some organizations are already experimenting aggressively with Oracle’s newest Builder Experience, posting demonstrations almost immediately after release. Others have successfully deployed Oracle AI capabilities into production, with more than 7,000 customers already using Oracle AI services. Still, others remain cautious, focusing primarily on traditional transactional systems while gradually evaluating AI opportunities. Despite these varying adoption rates, Leone believes Oracle must continue innovating at the leading edge because tomorrow’s competition may come from AI-first startups rather than traditional enterprise software vendors.
The Big Quote: “We’re truly moving from this system of record that we’ve been delivering for many years to truly delivering outcomes for our customers.”
More from Chris Leone:
Follow Chris Leone on LinkedIn or send a message via Oracle AI for Fusion Applications.


