thomas.wieberneit@aheadcrm.co.nz
The Orchestration Layer in Enterprise AI Just Got Named. It Has a Gemini Logo on It.

The Orchestration Layer in Enterprise AI Just Got Named. It Has a Gemini Logo on It.

What Google Cloud Next 2026 actually told us about the titan pecking order Google Cloud Next 2026 wrapped last week. The official version of the story is the one Google wanted you to read: 260 announcements, 1,302 customer use cases, the Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, eighth-generation TPUs, a $750 million partner fund, an $240 billion Marketplace backlog. Big numbers. On-message keynote. Tidy “agentic era” framing. The more interesting story is who showed up to validate it, and what Google actually built underneath. Five of the seven enterprise titans I track walked into Las Vegas and announced expanded partnerships that all rest on the same architecture: Gemini Enterprise as the agent control plane, with the titan’s product playing the role of premium ingredient. Salesforce. SAP. ServiceNow. Oracle. Adobe. Add Workday and Palantir Technologies to the picture, both adjacent to my titan list but visibly aligned in the same direction. Two titans were not in the picture. Microsoft, because Copilot is the direct counter-position and Cloud Next is not Microsoft’s stage. Zoho, because Zoho’s stack does not need a Google motion and Zoho’s buyer is not the same buyer. Both absences matter. More about them a little later. What Google actually built Let’s start with the framing. Google did not just ship a model platform with new features. It repositioned Google Cloud from “AI development environment” to enterprise agent control plane. Vertex AI services and roadmap evolutions are now delivered through the new Agent Platform rather than as a standalone product. That is not a naming change, it’s an entirely different playground. The Agent Platform stack now visibly includes: Agent Identity...