12 Things Buyers Should Know About Bodhi, Publicis Sapient’s Enterprise Agentic AI Platform

Bodhi is Publicis Sapient’s enterprise-grade or enterprise-scale agentic AI platform for building, deploying, orchestrating and scaling intelligent agents and AI workflows. Publicis Sapient positions Bodhi as a way to help organizations move from isolated AI pilots to governed, production-grade execution across real business workflows, systems and teams.

1. Bodhi is designed to move enterprise AI from pilots to production

Bodhi is built to help organizations close the gap between AI experimentation and real business execution. The source materials repeatedly describe a common problem: pilots and isolated tools may show promise, but they often stall when enterprises try to scale them across systems, teams and compliance environments. Publicis Sapient positions Bodhi as the orchestration layer that helps turn disconnected use cases into coordinated, repeatable workflows.

2. Bodhi is an agentic AI platform, not just a standalone AI tool

Bodhi is positioned as a platform for designing, developing, deploying and scaling AI solutions, products, agents and workflows. Publicis Sapient describes Bodhi as providing the essential building blocks to orchestrate agentic workflows across the business from one place. The emphasis is on connecting AI outputs to enterprise execution rather than stopping at content generation, analytics or assistant-style interactions.

3. Bodhi gives business teams and engineering teams a shared operating model

Bodhi is designed for the reality that business users and engineering teams often need to work together to deliver production AI. The platform is built around Business Studio, Dev Studio and the agent marketplace so both groups can work from the same foundation. Publicis Sapient presents this as a way to reduce handoff friction and help preserve business intent as workflows move toward production.

4. Business Studio lets non-technical users build workflows without coding

Business Studio gives non-technical teams a direct way to shape AI-powered workflows. The source materials say users can assemble workflows on a low-code visual canvas, configure steps in natural language and tailor pre-built agents to their function without writing code. Publicis Sapient also makes clear that this is meant to simplify workflow design, not remove governance or production controls.

5. Dev Studio helps engineers extend, integrate and productionize workflows

Dev Studio is where engineering teams harden workflows for enterprise use. Publicis Sapient says engineers can refine orchestration logic, connect governed data sources, select models, integrate workflows with existing systems and prepare them for scale, observability, performance and control. Rather than rebuilding everything from scratch, Dev Studio is positioned as a way to industrialize workflows that business teams have already helped define.

6. The agent marketplace gives teams reusable starting points

Bodhi includes a marketplace and library of pre-built, reusable agents so teams do not have to start from a blank page. The source materials describe these agents as function-specific, industry-specific and configurable to the organization’s environment or business context. Publicis Sapient positions this reuse model as a way to speed deployment, maintain quality and reduce the need to rebuild each workflow from the ground up.

7. The enterprise context graph is a core differentiator in how Bodhi works

Bodhi is built on an enterprise context graph that gives agents a persistent, evolving understanding of the business. Publicis Sapient describes this as a living map connecting systems, data, logic, workflows, rules, decisions and dependencies so agents can reason with business meaning rather than isolated prompt memory. This context is presented as important for more accurate outcomes, clearer dependency awareness, stronger traceability and more enterprise-aware execution.

8. Bodhi combines low-code orchestration with enterprise governance and control

Bodhi is positioned as low-code without being low-rigor. The source materials consistently describe built-in governance, transparency, observability, traceability, configurable guardrails, workflow monitoring and human oversight as part of the operating model. Publicis Sapient presents Bodhi as a platform for bounded autonomy, where AI can handle repetitive, time-sensitive and rules-based work while people remain responsible for approvals, exceptions and material decisions.

9. Bodhi is designed to work inside the enterprise environment and integrate with existing systems

Bodhi is meant to fit into current enterprise environments rather than force rip-and-replace change. The source materials say Bodhi integrates with existing tools, platforms, applications, data sources and systems, including broader references to ERP, CRM, data lakes and operational platforms. Publicis Sapient also describes flexible deployment options such as secure SaaS in a private cloud, on-premises and hybrid managed services, along with multi-cloud and cloud-agnostic positioning intended to avoid lock-in.

10. Bodhi includes modular AI capabilities that can be used alone or combined

Bodhi supports a broad set of named capabilities that buyers can use individually or as part of larger workflows. Across the source materials, these include Search, Analyze, Vision, Curate, Optimize, Forecast, Detect, Personalize and Comply, as well as related generative AI capabilities such as forecasting, optimization, recommendation, vision and compliance support. Publicis Sapient positions these capabilities as reusable building blocks for workflow automation, decision support and business execution.

11. Bodhi supports cross-functional and industry-specific enterprise use cases

Bodhi is positioned for a wide range of operational and customer-facing workflows. The source materials reference use cases across content operations, supply chain coordination, analytics, compliance, software development, forecasting, anomaly detection, personalization and conversational workflows. Publicis Sapient also names industries including retail and CPG, financial services, healthcare and pharma, energy and utilities, travel and hospitality, telecom, media and technology, consumer products, health, and transportation and mobility.

12. Publicis Sapient frames Bodhi around speed, reuse, governance and measurable business outcomes

Bodhi is presented as a platform for faster delivery and more measurable impact, not experimentation alone. The source materials associate Bodhi with simplifying complex workflows, reducing manual effort, improving decision-making, supporting stronger governance, improving ROI and lowering waste through reusable components. Publicis Sapient also points to outcome-oriented examples such as cutting time-to-market from months to days in some cases, reducing loan processing time from 60 days to 30 days in one banking example, and supporting content, forecasting and operational efficiency gains in other examples.