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AI Moves to Metered Utility: Microsoft, Cisco, and the Demand for Explicit Governance image

AI Moves to Metered Utility: Microsoft, Cisco, and the Demand for Explicit Governance

E1958 · Business of Tech
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The episode identifies a structural shift from AI as a discrete feature to AI as an ongoing operational system, emphasizing the growing burden of governance, accountability, and consumption oversight for managed service providers. Companies such as Microsoft, Cisco, and Google are redirecting strategy toward building control planes and governance infrastructure to address operational friction in deploying AI agents, as operational complexity—rather than access to tools—emerges as the bottleneck. This shift is substantiated by reports from GTIA, Cisco, and insights into vendor incentives and partner programs.

Evidence highlights a clear disconnect between widespread AI adoption and the maturity required to operationalize these systems. According to the Global Technology Industry Association (GTIA), 97% of IT service providers use some form of AI, but only 28% consider themselves AI-driven. Cisco reports that while 85% of enterprises are piloting AI agents, just 5% have moved them into production, pointing to persistent trust and operational gaps. Axios adds that in AI-intensive teams, compute expenditures are surpassing employee costs, with large organizations like Nvidia and Uber experiencing rapid escalation in AI-driven utility bills.

Further developments reinforce these themes. Microsoft is aligning partner incentives around new SKUs such as Microsoft 365 E7, explicitly targeting AI as a delivery motion rather than a feature. Consumption-based pricing—exemplified by the move to token-based billing for GitHub Copilot—exposes clients to “death by a thousand cuts” if usage is not closely monitored. Reports from Cobalt indicate significant security risk, with one in five organizations experiencing an incident involving large language models and a low remediation rate for identified vulnerabilities. Vendors such as Google and OpenAI are responding with new management platforms and reliance on consultancies to address integration and governance challenges.

For MSPs and IT leaders, the practical implications are clear: AI’s operational realities dictate a need to explicitly define governance, permission structures, and consumption management as part of service delivery. Unscoped or bundled AI services risk unbilled labor, unclear liability, and unmanaged exposure to security and cost overruns. The operational pivot involves inventorying AI features, establishing ownership, applying identity and access controls, tracking spend, and updating contracts to clarify accountability. Without formalizing these boundaries, MSPs may be left absorbing risk and cost by default.

00:00 AI Reality Check
04:43 Operator Burden
07:11 Meter the Risk
10:35 Why Do We Care? 

Supported by: 
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ScalePad 
Zero Networks 

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