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    Agentic AI’s challenge is getting agents to act like a team, not a crowd

    InfoForTechBy InfoForTechJune 21, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Agentic AI’s challenge is getting agents to act like a team, not a crowd
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    Adding more artificial intelligence agents to the workflow doesn’t make an enterprise smarter. In fact, it can make operations harder to manage. The problem is not the capabilities of individual agents but how well they work together.

    Many enterprises are moving from experimenting with single AI agents to a multi-level approach that spans functions such as customer care, supply chain and finance. Each works in isolation, and coordinating their actions and ensuring they move toward a single goal is a challenge.

    The problem is no longer how to create AI agents, but how to ensure they work together rather than creating hurdles for each other.

    Traditional workflows were built for linear, predictable processes. They work well when conditions are stable. But modern enterprise operations are dynamic and interconnected. Multi-agent systems had tremendous potential to adapt to changing conditions, but only when supported by a dedicated orchestration infrastructure.

    The coordination layer

    Coordination infrastructure serves as a central system that helps intelligent agents work as a team by distributing tasks, sharing information among agents and keeping everyone aligned toward the same goal. It relies on shared data stores and vector databases to improve orchestration. Without them, your agents may work with incomplete information and make conflicting decisions.

    Most multi-agent systems work based on four essential functions:

    Orchestration layer: This component acts as the “traffic controller.” It assigns tasks to the most suitable agent, manages communication between agents, balances workloads, and triggers human escalation when agents reach the limits of their authority or confidence.

    Shared memory and context engine: Instead of each agent operating with its own narrow view, this layer maintains a unified, real-time source of truth by pulling data from enterprise operational systems that agents can query to create shared context before making decisions.

    Event-based communication: When the unexpected happens, like a delay in shipping, a compliance issue or a sudden increase in demand, the system immediately informs the relevant agents so they can respond quickly and in a coordinated fashion.

    Governance and monitoring layer: This part keeps an eye on everything that’s happening. It makes sure all actions are visible, can be properly audited, and stay within the company’s rules, compliance requirements and risk limits. Having visibility into how the decisions are made enhances trust and accountability.

    How coordination infrastructure changes operations

    Most operational problems don’t come from a lack of data but from teams having different versions of the truth. Coordinated agents help close that gap by ensuring information moves quickly across the organization.

    In customer support, connected agents can prioritize tickets more intelligently, pick up on customer sentiment and send complex issues to the right person at the right time, leading to faster resolutions and happier customers.

    In information technology operations, multiple agents can monitor infrastructure, assess which incidents matter most to the business, and begin fixing problems automatically. Some large enterprises have reported reducing critical downtime by 30% to 40% after implementing this kind of coordinated system.

    Challenges remain

    Despite the benefits, companies continue to face significant hurdles:

    More agents but no integration: Simply adding more AI agents doesn’t improve results. If agents are not working with the same information, teams spend more time sorting out conflicts than benefiting from the automation.

    Poor data quality: Data problems are bigger than most organizations admit. Data is often fragmented, integration is outdated, and the pipeline is not always reliable. A recent Gartner Inc. survey found that 38% of AI projects in infrastructure and operations failed due to poor data quality. Bad data doesn’t just slow things down but contributes to poor decisions.

    Balancing human oversight: Agents are good at handling routine, repetitive tasks, but when decisions involve financial risk, regulatory compliance, or customer trust, human judgment is still essential. Finding the sweet spot between giving agents enough freedom to be useful and maintaining sufficient human control is proving to be one of the toughest balancing acts most organizations face.

    Coordination infrastructure will become a core part of organizations rather than an optional add-on over the next 12 to 24 months. Multi-agent enterprise systems are no longer experimental; they are becoming central to how modern businesses operate.

    However, their success depends less on the intelligence of individual agents and more on the strength of the coordination infrastructure behind them. Simply deploying more agents is not a winning strategy. Building the right integration layer is.

    Deepa Chauhan is a senior search engine optimization specialist at Accelirate Inc., an AI and automation company. She wrote this article for SiliconANGLE.

    Photo: Unsplash

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