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Cybersecurity Lead, PwC

“Very much looking forward to next year. I will be keeping my eye out for the date so I can make sure I lock it in my calendar.”
Software Engineering Specialist, Intuit

“Best conference I have ever been to with lots of insights and information on next generation technologies and those that are the need of the hour.”
Software Architect, GroupOn

“Happy to meet everyone who came from near and far. Glad to know you've discovered some great lessons here, and glad you joined us for all the discoveries great and small.”
Web Architect & Principal Engineer, Scott Davis

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Founder of Agile Developer Inc., Dr. Venkat Subramaniam

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Voltaire Yap, Global Events Manager, Oracle Corp.
AI agents do not fail because they cannot reason. They fail because the cost of their behaviour is not designed upfront. What begins as a simple agentic workflow with a planner, tools, and retrieval quickly grows into a system of chained calls, recursive loops, repeated memory access, and cascading model invocations. Each step may appear inexpensive, but at scale the combined cost becomes significant. For enterprise systems, this unpredictability is a critical risk.
This session examines the unit economics of agentic AI systems in production. Drawing from real deployments, it identifies where costs accumulate, including orchestration overhead from uncontrolled reasoning loops, excessive tool calls due to poorly defined boundaries, context window growth from unmanaged memory, and escalation from multi-agent coordination. The session also presents practical approaches to address these challenges, including agent loop budgeting, tiered model routing for sub-tasks, caching strategies for tool outputs, and observability patterns that make spend predictable.
What You Will Learn
Who Should Attend