Business
Planet Group International enters AI partnership with global senior leader Michele Vaccaro

Planet Group International (PGI), the Romanian-headquartered company specializing in content and process management, empowers its Artificial Intelligence team through the collaboration with Michele Vaccaro, a renowned global leader in Artificial Intelligence and digital transformation. The partnership is designed to accelerate PGI’s AI strategy and strengthen its capabilities, with the objective of generating 20% business growth in 2026.
Michele brings 25 years of deep expertise in Information Governance, with the last decade dedicated to Artificial Intelligence at global leaders such as EMC and OpenText. He has guided enterprises across industries through successful digital and AI transformation journeys.
With over 25 years of expertise delivering IT solutions across 20 countries in the EMEA region, PGI is uniquely positioned to integrate AI into its offering, particularly in highly regulated and complex sectors such as banking, energy, and engineering.
AI-driven solutions are expected to become a decisive differentiator in the coming years. Yet, success depends not only on revolutionary technology, but on data readiness. “If your data isn’t ready for AI, your business isn’t ready for AI,” said Michele Vaccaro.
Planet Group International prepared itself to become today the perfect companion for any business that wants to start its AI journey, thanks to its extensive know-how in information governance and the company’s strong competencies in managing unstructured content and preparing data for AI. Combined with its AI expertise, skills, and the ability to adapt international best practices to the local geographical context, PGI can guide organizations throughout the entire journey.
“While AI tools are transformative, they do not generate value on their own. They require continuous training, alignment with business processes, and integration into industry-specific contexts. PGI’s long-standing expertise in content and process management ensures it can provide this foundation, helping customers deploy AI smoothly and effectively while safeguarding compliance and governance. Through this collaboration with Michele Vaccaro, PGI takes a bold step forward in its AI journey,” said Ghenadie Starsii – Innovation Manager at Planet Group International.
According to PGI, on top of preparing the data for AI, which is a critical prerequisite, there are other very important steps to ensure a successful AI journey, including:
- Defining a transformative vision and strategy – AI success starts with an enterprise-level vision that treats AI as a driver of fundamental business transformation, not just incremental change. This ensures alignment across leadership and enables the design of secure, efficient, and coherent architectures to support long-term growth.
- Carefully selecting use cases– Organizations should prioritize strategic, business-aligned areas where AI can deliver measurable value, balancing business impact with technical feasibility.
- People and change management– Generative AI must be treated as a broad business priority, not just a technology initiative. Companies must invest in critical roles, foster data and AI literacy, and drive cultural adoption across all levels of the enterprise.
With this new partnership, PGI creates the formula to deliver real business value, the company aiming to be a trusted partner for organizations adopting AI responsibly and strategically. With focus on innovation, data readiness, and sustainable AI, PGI is positioned to help enterprises unlock growth, boost competitiveness, and lead into the AI-powered future.
Planet Group International journey began over twenty-five years ago in a world hungry for innovation with a singular purpose – to redefine the business landscape and create a sustainable impact on people’s lives. PGI has established a robust presence across seven countries, including Romania, Turkey, Italy, regions in Africa, and the Middle East, with dedicated consulting and implementation teams.
Business
What’s ‘decision-making AI’ and how is it transforming SMEs?

Their findings show many business leaders don’t yet understand how AI can transform the performance of their organisation. The key lies in decision-making AI, or ‘decision intelligence’ – but what does that actually mean?
According to YouGov’s findings published in August 2025, whilst 31% of SME leaders are already using AI-powered tools – and another 15% plan to – just 19% are using AI for decision-making within their business. Strikingly, YouGov’s press release about the new figures took a surprised tone at the concept of using AI to support decision-making, “given the technology’s well-known tendency to occasionally hallucinate answers”.
That sentence highlights a lack of understanding on the part of the author, which perhaps reflects some wider misunderstandings and assumptions. When it comes to business, what do we mean by AI? And are we missing a trick if we’re confined to thinking of it as ChatGPT or Microsoft Copilot and not applying AI at a higher level to help make important business decisions?
Misunderstandings and mixed messages
Confusion often lies in the broad brush with which ‘AI’ is painted. The term can encompass use cases as disparate as recipe suggestions and predictive analytics engines. This blurs the distinction between novelty and necessity, between compute-intensive curiosity and transformational business decision support.
The YouGov data highlights that only 29% of SMEs have any form of in-house AI expertise; others are turning to external suppliers or remaining cautious. That gap in understanding is fertile ground for misconceptions around reliability, risk, and return.
I see the solution as twofold: firstly, with the need for education. Business leaders, particularly within SMEs and the mid-market, need better support from the public and private sector to understand how AI can substantially boost their company’s performance – that AI isn’t some magic wand but a disciplined data-driven support tool.
Secondly, with tailored delivery. AI is most effective when it’s applied within a system that’s bespoke to each firm’s data, culture, and decision-making habits – not when it’s seen as a ready-made tool to be bought off the shelf.
Decision intelligence
While generative AI and agentic AI help streamline desk-based tasks and automate customer service, the true potential of AI is unlocked with ‘decision intelligence’. For most SMEs, this decision-making AI is what will really boost the bottom line.
Decision intelligence involves bringing an organisation’s data together, then using custom machine-learning models that directly answer the questions business leaders ask: “What’s happening in my business?”, “Why is it happening?”, and “What should I do next?”. I describe it as allowing you to look around corners and look into corners.
These AI tools help businesses deliver tangible outcomes in weeks, not years, drawing on data from multiple sources such as Marketing, Sales, Finance, HR, and Operations, to deliver actionable and accountable intelligence.
Take Irish retail chain Petstop as an example. Using Galvia’s AI-powered platform, they created a single, connected view of their data, breaking down internal silos and enabling faster, smarter decisions across every level of the organisation. With intelligent prompts, real-time predictions, and clear insights, their teams began acting with greater confidence and agility, from the head office to the shop floor. As the founder and CEO told me, “it was like turning on the lights.”
Early results have included their best online sales performance outside the holiday period, recovering a 2.5% revenue dip without spending on ads, and launching customer campaigns that prioritised retention over acquisition, delivering far stronger ROI.
A call for intelligent adoption
SMEs are still in the early stages of AI adoption. I often hear leaders say they can see the potential of AI but don’t know which problem to solve first.
My advice: start with one dataset, one decision or one challenge. Often, the most powerful starting point is to unlock value from what you already have. The risk is that, in trying to do everything, you end up doing nothing.
Encouragingly, there are now more structured ways for leaders to build their confidence in AI. Initiatives such as dedicated AI Adoption accelerator programmes give business directors a chance to understand the fundamentals, explore the potential in their own data, and leave with practical next steps for driving impact. The more SMEs can access that kind of support, the faster they’ll move from AI confusion to clarity.
Business
UK economy saw zero growth in July

The UK economy failed to grow in July, according to the latest official figures.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the economy saw zero growth in the month, following a 0.4% expansion in June.
However, monthly figures are volatile, and over the three months to the end of July, the economy grew by 0.2% compared with the previous three months, the ONS said.
The government is under mounting pressure to deliver on its key priority of boosting economic growth ahead of the Budget on 26 November.
The UK’s statistics body said the service sector performed well, helped by the health sector, computer programming and office support services.
However, this was offset by a weak performance in the manufacturing sector.
In the Budget, Chancellor Rachel Reeves will outline the government’s tax and spending plans with increasing speculation she will have to raise taxes to meet her self-imposed fiscal rules.
Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG UK, said the “weak start to the third quarter [is] a sign of things to come”.
“Economic activity is expected to slow in the second half of the year as the temporary factors which pushed up growth in the first half of 2025 begin to fade,” she said.
“Additionally, the later date of the Autumn Budget could prolong some uncertainties for businesses, delaying investment decisions and acting as a drag on growth until more clarity emerges.”
Responding to the latest growth figures, a Treasury spokesperson said: “We know there’s more to do to boost growth because whilst our economy isn’t broken, it does feel stuck.
“That’s the result of years of underinvestment, which we’re determined to reverse through our plan for change.
Shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride said: “Any economic growth is welcome – but this government is distracted from the problems the country is facing.
“While the government lurch from one scandal to another, borrowing costs recently hit a 27-year high – a damning vote of no confidence in Labour that makes painful tax rises all but certain.”
Business
South Korea workers detained in US raid head home

More than 300 South Koreans who were detained in a massive immigration raid at a Hyundai plant in the US state of Georgia last week are due to arrive home on Friday.
Their return comes as the country’s president and Hyundai’s chief executive have warned about the impact of the raid.
A chartered Korean Air jet carrying the workers and 14 non-Koreans who were also detained in the raid took off from Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport at midday local time on Thursday (17:00 BST). One South Korean national has reportedly chosen to stay in the US to seek permanent residency.
The plane is expected to arrive at Incheon International Airport at about 15:30 Seoul time (07:30 GMT) on Friday.
The departure was delayed by more than a day because of an instruction from the White House, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said on Thursday.
President Donald Trump ordered the pause to check whether the workers were willing to remain in the US to continue working and training Americans, according to a South Korean foreign ministry official.
The BBC has contacted the White House for comment.
Lee also said companies would be “very hesitant” about investing in the US following the raid.
“The situation is extremely bewildering,” Lee added, while noting it is common practice for Korean firms to send workers to help set up overseas factories.
“If that’s no longer allowed, establishing manufacturing facilities in the US will only become more difficult… making companies question whether it’s worth doing at all,” he added.
Seoul is negotiating with Washington on visa options for South Korean workers “whether that means securing [higher] quotas or creating new visa categories”, Lee said.
On Friday, the South Korean foreign ministry said it had called for the US Congress to support a new visa for Korean firms.
During meetings with US senators in Washington this week, Foreign Minister Cho Hyun reiterated concerns among South Koreans over the arrests, the ministry said in a statement.
Meanwhile, Hyundai’s chief executive José Muñoz has said the raid will delay the factory’s opening.
Mr Muñoz told US media that the raid will create “minimum two to three months delay [in opening the factory] because now all these people want to get back”.

Last week, US officials detained 475 people – more than 300 of them South Korean nationals – who they said were working illegally at the battery facility, one of the largest foreign investment projects in Georgia.
LG Energy Solution, which operates the plant with Hyundai, said that many of its employees who were arrested had various types of visas or were under a visa waiver programme.
A worker at the plant spoke to the BBC about the panic and confusion during the raid. The employee said the vast majority of the workers detained were mechanics installing production lines at the site, and were employed by a contractor.
South Korea, a close US ally in Asia, has pledged to invest tens of billions of dollars in America, partly to offset tariffs.
Media in the country have described the raid as a “shock,” with the Dong-A Ilbo newspaper warning that it could have “a chilling effect on the activities of our businesses in the United States”.
The Yonhap News Agency published an editorial on Thursday urging the two countries to “cooperate to repair cracks in their alliance”.
The timing of the raid, as the two governments engage in sensitive trade talks, has raised concern in Seoul.
The White House has defended the operation at the Hyundai plant, dismissing concerns that the raid could deter foreign investment.
On Sunday, US President Donald Trump referenced the raid in a social media post and called for foreign companies to hire Americans.
The US government would make it “quickly and legally possible” for foreign firms to bring workers into the country if they respected its immigration laws, Trump said.
Additional reporting by Hosu Lee in Seoul
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