AIOct 27, 2025

From Benchmarks to Business Impact: Deploying IBM Generalist Agent in Enterprise Production

arXiv:2510.23856v15 citationsh-index: 11Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of moving agents from prototypes to measurable business value for enterprises, though it is incremental as it builds on existing generalist agent concepts.

The paper tackles the challenge of deploying generalist agents in enterprise production by developing IBM's CUGA, which achieved state-of-the-art performance on benchmarks like AppWorld and WebArena and showed potential for reducing development time and cost in a pilot within the talent acquisition domain.

Agents are rapidly advancing in automating digital work, but enterprises face a harder challenge: moving beyond prototypes to deployed systems that deliver measurable business value. This path is complicated by fragmented frameworks, slow development, and the absence of standardized evaluation practices. Generalist agents have emerged as a promising direction, excelling on academic benchmarks and offering flexibility across task types, applications, and modalities. Yet, evidence of their use in production enterprise settings remains limited. This paper reports IBM's experience developing and piloting the Computer Using Generalist Agent (CUGA), which has been open-sourced for the community (https://github.com/cuga-project/cuga-agent). CUGA adopts a hierarchical planner--executor architecture with strong analytical foundations, achieving state-of-the-art performance on AppWorld and WebArena. Beyond benchmarks, it was evaluated in a pilot within the Business-Process-Outsourcing talent acquisition domain, addressing enterprise requirements for scalability, auditability, safety, and governance. To support assessment, we introduce BPO-TA, a 26-task benchmark spanning 13 analytics endpoints. In preliminary evaluations, CUGA approached the accuracy of specialized agents while indicating potential for reducing development time and cost. Our contribution is twofold: presenting early evidence of generalist agents operating at enterprise scale, and distilling technical and organizational lessons from this initial pilot. We outline requirements and next steps for advancing research-grade architectures like CUGA into robust, enterprise-ready systems.

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