A Sydney data-analytics firm has secured a seat at Google Cloud’s agentic AI table. Quantium, founded in Sydney in 2002, has launched a dedicated Gemini Enterprise practice to build and deploy AI agents for enterprise clients on Google Cloud, the company confirmed in a report by IT Brief Australia.
The move places Quantium among a small set of AI-native services partners chosen for Google Cloud’s Gemini Enterprise transformation programme, the channel arm of a A push announced alongside the platform’s general availability in April.
The practice targets clients across retail, financial services, healthcare, government and professional services. It offers sandbox development environments and technical resources designed to move clients from prototype to production, the point where most agentic AI projects stall.
What Quantium is signing up for
Google Cloud made the underlying commitment on 22 April 2026, pledging US$750 million to its partner ecosystem to accelerate agentic AI development, according to Google Cloud’s press announcement. The Gemini Enterprise transformation programme sits inside that fund, giving partners credits for sandbox development, technical upskilling and referral opportunities to build, test and deploy agents for joint customers.
Quantium was named among a group of AI-native services partners standing up Gemini Enterprise practices, a list that also includes Altimetrik, Artefact, Distyl.ai and Tryolabs, per the same announcement. That is a different tier from the large systems integrators, such as Accenture, Deloitte and PwC, which are receiving embedded forward-deployed engineers from Google.
The distinction matters. Google is betting that specialist, AI-native firms can move faster on production deployments than traditional consultancies, and Quantium is the Australian name on that shortlist.
Adam Driussi, Quantium’s co-founder and chief executive, said the firm is already running agents in production for enterprise clients, and that the tie-up puts that capability inside the infrastructure customers already use, according to IT Brief Australia. He framed the practice as an extension of more than two decades of industry work across the sectors it now serves.
Paul Migliorini, vice president of Google Cloud Australia and New Zealand, described partners as central to how businesses adopt AI, calling Quantium a leading voice in helping customers organise around the technology, in comments to the same outlet.
Why the platform underneath it matters
The practice is built on a platform Google has been reshaping quickly. Gemini Enterprise is now a unified environment for building, running and governing AI agents at scale, folding in the developer tooling that was previously Vertex AI, an employee-facing app and a validated partner gallery, IT Brief Australia reported when the expansion landed on 23 April.
That platform adds the governance scaffolding enterprises tend to demand before they let agents touch live systems: cryptographic agent identities, an agent gateway that mediates access to data sources, and safeguards against prompt injection and data leakage. For regulated Australian sectors, banking, health and government among them, those controls are often the difference between a pilot and a signed contract.
Quantium is not the only firm reading the moment this way. NTT DATA has announced its own Gemini Enterprise practice, targeting 5,000 certified experts to help enterprises move from experimentation to scaled deployment, NTT DATA said in June. The pattern is clear: the services layer, not just the model, is where the agentic AI market is being contested.
Why it matters for Australia
The significance for Australia is less about one firm’s practice and more about the channel it represents. Large local enterprises rarely build agentic systems in-house from scratch. They lean on a services partner to design, integrate and govern the work, and that partner’s platform choice tends to become the customer’s platform choice.
Quantium’s client base gives it unusual reach into that decision. Its named customers include Woolworths Group, Commonwealth Bank and Telstra, three of the country’s most consequential handlers of consumer data. A practice pointing those relationships at Gemini Enterprise nudges a meaningful slice of Australian corporate AI spending toward Google’s stack, in a market where Microsoft and Amazon are competing hard for the same enterprise budgets.
There is also a sovereignty and skills dimension. Having an Australian-founded firm selected as a global transformation partner keeps agentic AI delivery, and the upskilling that comes with it, anchored locally rather than routed entirely through offshore integrators. Google’s programme explicitly funds technical upskilling, which over time seeds a pool of local practitioners who understand how to deploy agents against Australian data and regulatory settings.
The open questions are the familiar ones. Agentic systems that act autonomously across business processes raise sharper accountability, privacy and auditability concerns than earlier generations of enterprise AI, and Australia’s regulators are still catching up. A practice that promises to move clients from prototype to production is also, implicitly, promising to answer those questions at scale.
The next test will be visible deployments. If Quantium can point to named Australian agents running in production, ideally in a regulated sector, the channel play becomes a case study others follow. If the work stays in the sandbox, it stays a positioning exercise. Watch which of its marquee clients goes public first.
Sources: IT Brief Australia — Quantium launches Gemini Enterprise practice with Google; Google Cloud — $750 million partner commitment; IT Brief Australia — Google Cloud expands Gemini Enterprise into AI agent hub; NTT DATA — expanded Google Cloud collaboration.








