AI now drives global content operations, TransPerfect finds

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — Artificial Intelligence (AI) has crossed the threshold from experimental tool to operational infrastructure across global content operations, with 74% of enterprise leaders ranking AI strategies and automation as a top priority for 2026, according to a new report released by TransPerfect.
The findings, drawn from a survey of 96 enterprise leaders across operations, marketing, localization, and IT, reveal that 65% of organizations already use AI or machine-assisted translation in their localization workflows — a tipping point that signals AI is no longer optional for companies managing multilingual content at scale.
The shift is reshaping how Western enterprises handle global communications, with direct implications for outsourcing providers, language service vendors, and content operations teams worldwide.
The new mandate: do more with less
The TransPerfect report frames a clear tension shaping 2026 budgets: leadership is demanding higher throughput, better personalization, and faster time-to-market, while 40% of respondents expect localization budgets to remain flat.
The result is a “do more with less” mandate that has accelerated AI adoption across enterprise functions, with 69% of organizations actively piloting or embedding AI across their broader operations.
The report finds that the organizations succeeding have centralized workflows, paired AI with human expertise, and built governance frameworks that allow them to scale with confidence.
“Our clients are long past the discovery and pilot phases — and are now implementing AI solutions across the enterprise. For any executive in this position, perusing this new report will be time well spent,” said Phil Shawe, president and co-CEO of TransPerfect.
A measurement gap that could stall progress
Despite rapid adoption, the report exposes a critical weakness in how enterprises track AI’s value. One in four organizations still do not measure the business impact of multilingual content — leaving them unable to quantify what AI is delivering or to justify further investment in the technology.
“Without clear metrics tied to outcomes like conversion, engagement, and time-to-market, it’s difficult to quantify the value AI is delivering or make the case for further investment,” the report stated.
Organizations adopting AI are seeing compounding gains in speed, cost efficiency, and scale, driven by advances in generative AI, automated quality estimation, and large language models specifically trained for translation — but those gains risk going unrecognized inside companies that cannot tie outputs to business outcomes.
The findings reflect a broader shift unfolding across the global outsourcing industry, where language service providers, content vendors, and BPO firms supporting multilingual operations are racing to integrate AI into their delivery models.
As enterprise clients move past pilots and into full-scale AI deployment, providers that combine automation with human expertise, governance frameworks, and measurable business impact are positioned to capture the next wave of contracts — while those still selling translation as labor capacity face mounting pressure to evolve.

Independent




