Sydney, Australia – DXC Technology has launched DXC Engineering, a dedicated global group within its Consulting & Engineering Services (CES) organisation aimed at helping enterprises design, build and scale AI-powered products, platforms and software-defined experiences across regulated and mission-critical industries.
The new unit consolidates DXC’s engineering capabilities under a single operating model intended to support organisations adopting AI-enabled and software-led transformation initiatives. The company said the move responds to increasing demand from enterprises seeking engineering expertise to integrate and operationalise AI across legacy and multivendor technology environments.
DXC Engineering brings together more than 11,000 engineers globally within DXC’s broader CES organisation, which includes more than 40,000 professionals across 70 countries. The company said the new structure builds on more than 60 years of innovation and over 30 years of digital engineering experience.
“The moment is now for customers to turn AI ambition into operational reality. DXC Engineering is more than a construct. It’s a signal to the market and to our customers that we are elevating the importance of our IP – both human and digital. As AI moves from experimentation to production, customers need partners who can take accountability for designing, building and operating intelligent systems at scale, especially in environments where failure is not an option,” said Ramnath Venkataraman, President, Consulting & Engineering Services, DXC Technology.
According to the company, DXC Engineering is built on its Xponential AI orchestration blueprint and combines AI-native software and product engineering with industry-specific expertise, proprietary platforms and delivery accelerators.
In the automotive sector, DXC said the unit will support areas such as digital cockpit software, connected vehicle platforms and autonomous driving technologies. It also highlighted AMBER, the company’s proprietary platform intended to help automakers accelerate software-defined vehicle programmes and manage multivendor environments.
For financial services clients, DXC Engineering will focus on bespoke software development and integration across capital markets, wealth management and commercial banking operations.
The company added that the engineering unit will also support sectors including telecommunications, energy, healthcare and defence, delivering engineering capabilities for operationally critical systems such as manufacturing platforms, airports and defence infrastructure.
DXC said the new group will leverage reusable intellectual property, industry-specific platforms and ecosystem partnerships to help customers modernise complex environments and deploy AI-enabled systems designed for high reliability, security and regulatory compliance.
The company stated that its software currently powers more than 50 million vehicles worldwide and that it has more than two decades of experience supporting financial services platforms. It also said its manufacturing platforms manage more than 4 million production points globally.

