Indian AI firm Digitide Solutions has launched Pulse.nerve, a new orchestration platform aimed at bringing order to the growing number of artificial intelligence agents deployed across large organisations.

Announced on 31 March 2026 in Bengaluru, the platform is designed to unify fragmented AI systems that are currently hampering efficiency in global enterprises. Digitide Solutions Limited (NSE: DIGITIDE) describes Pulse.nerve as a universal control layer built on the Model Context Protocol (MCP), referred to as the emerging “USB-C for AI” standard.

The launch includes more than 100 ready-to-deploy specialised AI agents targeting key sectors such as banking and financial services, healthcare, and retail.Enterprise AI adoption has accelerated rapidly, with Gartner forecasting that over 40% of enterprise applications will include role-specific AI agents by the end of 2026.

However, many companies are struggling with “disconnected intelligence”. Industry data cited by the company shows that 73% of enterprises run five or more separate AI agents, resulting in an average annual waste of $2.1 million from redundant integrations. Without central governance, AI incidents take an average of 47 minutes to resolve.”Enterprises are no longer struggling with a lack of AI; they are drowning in it,” said Gurmeet Chahal, CEO and Executive Director of Digitide Solutions.

“Pulse.nerve is the central nervous system the industry has been waiting for.”The platform integrates with major enterprise systems including Salesforce, SAP, Oracle, ServiceNow, Guidewire, and Duck Creek. Its key features include intelligent task routing, a centralised “kill-switch” for instant control over any agent, and universal compliance tools that enforce security and audit rules across all systems.

In a recent deployment with a global insurance company, Pulse.nerve delivered a 45% improvement in operational productivity and accelerated AI time-to-value by 3.4 times, while achieving complete audit visibility. The global market for agentic AI is projected to reach $10.8 billion in 2026, yet only 14% of enterprises currently have proper orchestration systems in place.