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Showing posts with label CCTEQ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CCTEQ. Show all posts

Thursday, April 2, 2026

SEIZING AGENTIC AI OPPORTUNITY IN M’SIA

 

Leading companies are moving beyond experimentation as a third of “AI future-built” firms have deployed agentic solutions and are demonstrating measurable value.

MALAYSIA stands at a critical inflection point in the global artificial intelligence (AI) race.

After the surge of generative AI, a new wave is emerging in the form of agentic AI.

Agentic AI are AI execution models involving autonomous agents that coordinate across workflows, tools and systems with minimal human input.

While it stops short of true autonomous decision-making, agentic AI’s ability to make actionable decisions within predefined parameters is a game changer.

Malaysia has a solid foundation to build on.

According to Boston Consultant Group’s AI Maturity Matrix, which benchmarks 73 economies globally on AI exposure and AI readiness, Malaysia is classified as a “steady contender”.

It places the nation just one tier behind AI pioneers such as the United States, the United Kingdom and China.

This position reflects Malaysia’s significant exposure to AI, particularly in large sectors like retail and wholesale, telecommunication and financial services.

At the same time, it indicates a solid level of AI readiness, supported by forward-looking ambitions, policies and regulatory frameworks on AI.

An evolving AI landscape

AI is rapidly becoming a critical national infrastructure that empowers wider opportunities.

As a result, geopolitical shifts, compute access and sovereign capability increasingly determine economic outcomes and geopolitical influence.

The US and China lead the global AI race.

Tech companies from these two superpowers created 59% and 26%, respectively, of top-performing large language models (LLM).

This presents a conundrum for competing nations.

Relying solely on external technology providers poses challenges for corporate leaders and governments, especially since local regulations, data requirements and model availability are subject to shifting policies.

Against this backdrop, a small group of “GenAI middle powers” is emerging across Europe, Asia and the Middle East.

Each has distinct strengths that might allow it to compete as a regional or global technology supplier.

This race now expands beyond software to encompass hardware, infrastructure and technology adoption.

Malaysia must actively build its domestic AI capabilities to avoid high technology sovereignty risks as it looks to the future of agentic AI.

Execution speed and scale will dictate whether Malaysia leads in Asean or falls behind.

Encouragingly, the Digital Ministry, through the establishment of the National AI Office (NAIO), is driving a coordinated national AI agenda – spanning governance frameworks, cross-sector adoption and ecosystem development.

These efforts lay the critical foundations for more advanced applications, including the next wave of agentic AI.

Productivity multiplier

Globally, the shift is already underway and early signs indicate that the rise of agentic AI will be rapid.

BCG’s Build for the Future 2025 study shows that agentic AI’s share of AI-driven value is expected to nearly double from 17% in 2025 to 29% by 2028.

Leading companies are moving beyond experimentation – one-third of “AI future-built” firms have deployed agentic solutions and are demonstrating measurable value.

Early adopters are already unlocking tangible benefits. BCG’s study shows that while companies are exploring agentic AI across operations, support functions and innovation, customer experience is emerging as the top priority.

Leading use cases include deploying intelligent agents to autonomously handle Level 1 and Level 2 customer support, as well as optimising digital marketing campaigns – continuously adjusting bids to maximise returns, reallocating spend to high-performing channels and testing creatives in real time.

AI undoubtedly represents a powerful productivity multiplier for Malaysia.

It can strengthen key economic sectors such as manufacturing, financial services and many other industries. For SMEs, agentic AI can lower the cost of sophistication, providing access to capabilities once reserved for large enterprises.

Beyond the private sector, agentic AI can modernise public services and improve policy-making decisions and delivery in healthcare, education and justice.

It can help bridge urban-rural divides by expanding access to digital services and decision support.

In a nation balancing growth ambitions with demographic and fiscal constraints, agentic AI is not merely a technology upgrade – it is a lever for sustainable and inclusive growth.

Four strategic priorities

To compete effectively in this next phase of AI, Malaysia must act with clarity and intent across four priorities.

> Build sovereign AI capabilities. Malaysia could strategically build sovereign AI capabilities in areas where it has natural strengths and where risk mitigation matters most.

This includes expanding reliable access to compute, leveraging its growing data centre ecosystem.

A pragmatic and technology-neutral approach that combines global technology partnerships with targeted domestic capability-building will be more effective than pursuing full-stack independence.

Technology partnerships could focus on leveraging leading AI innovations from both Western and Eastern ecosystems in a neutral manner.

Open-source AI models offer a practical pathway to reduce dependency risks, accelerate adoption and support local customisation.

At the same time, efforts could focus on enabling responsible use of high-quality local datasets.

> Invest aggressively in talent. Malaysia must pair global talent attraction with sustained local capability development to build the AI workforce needed to compete at scale.

It could aggressively attract top global AI talent through competitive incentives, strong research ecosystems and vibrant innovation hubs, while simultaneously building a deep domestic pipeline of AI talent.

This requires strengthening STEM education, expanding university–industry collaboration, embedding AI in technical and vocational training and accelerating workforce upskilling across sectors.

> Scale national platforms. Malaysia must move from fragmented pilots to scaled national platforms, anchored on high-impact use cases – such as a unified government interface linked to MyDigitalID.

This platform provides a common foundation to embed AI agents that deliver personalised public services.

Scaling up such platforms will catalyse greater private-sector participation and ensure sustainable adoption of agentic AI.

In addition, Malaysia could strengthen exchange platforms that bring together the government, industry and academia to accelerate collaboration, capability-building and use case development.

Associations such as AI Malaysia (AIM), Malaysian Autonomous Intelligence & Robotics Association (MyAIRA), along with other industry associations, can play a critical role in sharing best practices, mobilising talent and aligning stakeholders to drive ecosystem-wide adoption of agentic AI.

> Implement pro-innovation regulation. Malaysia needs regulations that protect users but also preserve competition.

Policymakers could favour a flexible model over rigid frameworks, particularly in a fast-evolving technological landscape.

Malaysia could pursue a balanced approach – combining principle-based guidelines, regulatory sandboxes and sector-specific standards that can evolve alongside the technology.

Priming Malaysia for growth is critical, but it is essential that this is done through a forward-looking and ethical approach.

Malaysia has the opportunity to differentiate itself by championing ethical, inclusive AI.

This is a core foundation of effective AI adoption, and should align with national values, ensuring that trust and confidence underpin the next wave of innovation in agentic AI.

Defining the future

The stakes are clear. AI investment compounds rapidly. Early movers attract capital, talent and vibrant ecosystems.

The choice is not whether AI will reshape the Malaysian economy.

The choice is whether Malaysia will shape that transformation with speed, clarity and ambition while remaining anchored to core Malaysian values.

CF Ong is managing director and senior partner in Boston Consulting Group.
CF Ong is managing director and senior partner in Boston Consulting Group.

Saturday, October 7, 2023

TM OFFERS MORE SPEED FOR LESS

Unifi executive vice president Anand Vijayan said the new pricing is part of the company’s initiative to offer affordable and inclusive solutions for consumers in Malaysia. — SHAARI CHEMAT / THESTAR


INTERNET users in Malaysia can expect to experience faster speeds at a more affordable rate with TM's newly-revised Unifi broadband plans.

Effective today, TM has lowered the monthly price of its Unifi broadband plans where the 100Mbps plan is now listed at RM99, RM139 for 300Mbps, RM159 for 500Mbps.

Previously the monthly plans were priced at RM129, RM149 and RM209 respectively.

The company will also be pricing its 1Gbps and 2Gbps standalone plans at RM289 and RM319 per month.

Previously the 1Gbps and 2Gbps plans bundled with Unifi TV and Netflix subscriptions were priced at RM378.80 monthly and RM428.90 monthly.

For a limited period of three months, the company will also be offering the 100Mbps plan for RM89. Both new and existing eligible customers can subscribe to the plan.

Unifi executive vice president Anand Vijayan said the new pricing is part of the company’s initiative to offer affordable and inclusive solutions for consumers in Malaysia.

“Aligning with the Ministry of Communications and Digital’s aim to provide higher Internet speeds at lower prices, Unifi’s vibrant new broadband packages offer greater affordability through significant price reductions, value-added converged lifestyle services and integrated business solutions,” he said at a media briefing in Kuala Lumpur on Oct 4.

As for existing customers, a free speed upgrade is in store. According to Anand, customers will be automatically upgraded to the next highest speed tier based on their existing plan. He said no obligations or service re-contract are required.
 

According to Anand, existing customers will get free speed upgrades According to Anand, existing customers will get free speed upgrades

“This free speed upgrade will be rolled out to eligible Unifi customers, driving home its commitment to deliver higher speeds at lower prices to all customer segments,” he said, adding that the transition is expected to take place in phases between now and January 2024.

Existing customers will be informed of the new speed upgrades via the official communications channel such as SMS and through WhatsApp.

Unifi will also offer a bundled plan that comes with 100Mbps Unifi and UNI5G Postpaid unlimited mobile data plan for RM149 per month plus a new device.

“Addressing concerns about the affordability of 5G-enabled devices, this new bundle comes with a free 5G smartphone - allowing more Malaysians to conveniently adopt and enjoy 5G capabilities,” Anand said.

As Malaysia moves towards achieving 80% 5G network coverage in populated areas by the end of the year, the company said Unifi Mobile is also actively driving 5G adoption among users by simplifying their transition to 5G plans.

"All of its #LiveUnstoppable UNI5G postpaid and prepaid offerings are automatically enabled with 5G, reducing the need for additional activation or documentation," said Unifi Mobile executive vice president Jasmine Lee.

The company has set a new baseline for affordable broadband with the 100Mbps plan now being priced at less than RM100, added Anand. TM is committed towards empowering digital inclusivity across all user segments.

The company will continue to offer the 30Mbps plan for RM69 under Pakej Rahmah Unifi to key customer groups including the underserved communities such as senior citizens, OKU, B40 communities and armed uniform veterans.

Anand said eligible customers under these groups can also subscribe to Unifi’s Pakej 5G Rahmah offering unlimited data and get 5G devices starting from RM120.

The company clarified that Pakej Rahmah Unifi customers will not get the free speed upgrade to the next speed tier which is 100Mbps. It added that other curated offerings for key customer groups will be announced later.

Meanwhile customers in the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) segment will also see price reductions in Unifi Biz Fibre offerings.

The 100Mbps plan is now priced at RM129, RM199 for 300Mbps, RM239 for 500Mbps, RM319 for 1Gbps and RM369 for 2Gbps.

Previously the plans were priced between RM139 to RM399.

“Adding more value for businesses, the new broadband plans come bundled with Unifi’s Simple Voice Plan, offering the lowest voice rates across any network for calls to any fixed or mobile line nationwide,” Anand said.

Unifi Biz Fibre customers will also be given priority at Unifi Concept Stores with access to premium lanes to address specific issues or queries.

The company is also committed towards enhancing its customer experience. Among its initiatives are conducting proactive analysis to identify service issues before it impacts customers and perform restorations remotely whenever possible.

“This is conveniently managed via the MyUnifi app which also serves as a one-stop portal for all Unifi’s customers needs,” Anand said.

“TM continues to push the envelope in delivering innovative solutions and services that will power Malaysia towards becoming a digital nation,” he concluded.


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