Unlike traditional chatbots that only answer questions, Workday positions these agents as “action‑taking” AI systems capable of completing workflows on the user’s behalf. Because they run inside Workday’s platform, they operate on the same real‑time HR, finance, and organizational data used by the company’s core applications.
This architecture allows the agents to understand context such as:
Using that context, the system can decide what steps are required and execute them automatically while following company governance rules.
Sana for ITSM focuses on automating internal service workflows that typically require coordination between HR, IT, and finance teams.
Common processes it can handle include:
Because the agent operates directly on Workday’s organizational data, it can automatically determine who should receive access, which systems need updates, and which approvals are required.
Instead of employees filing tickets and waiting for multiple teams to respond, the AI agent can orchestrate the steps behind the scenes—triggering permissions, routing approvals, and updating systems automatically.
The Sana Travel Agent targets another common enterprise pain point: corporate travel planning and expense management scattered across booking platforms, approval systems, and finance tools.
Workday’s Travel Agent combines these steps into a single workflow that employees can manage conversationally.
Through the agent, users can:
The goal is to connect travel booking and expense management into a unified process while giving finance teams visibility into spend as it occurs.
A key design principle behind these agents is that they run where the system of record already lives. Instead of integrating loosely with external systems, they operate within Workday’s HR and finance platform.
That allows them to use:
This context enables the agents to perform actions that follow company‑specific rules—for example enforcing travel policies, ensuring the correct manager approves a trip, or provisioning system access according to role definitions.
In practice, this means the conversational interface is not just answering questions but executing workflows aligned with enterprise compliance and approval structures.
Workday launched Sana from Workday, including its conversational AI interface and other AI capabilities, to customers worldwide in March 2026.
At the Sana AI Summit on May 21, 2026, the company introduced the two new agents—Sana for ITSM and the Travel Agent—as additional capabilities built on that platform.
However, the announcement materials did not specify a firm general‑availability timeline for the new agents themselves. They were introduced and demonstrated at the event, but Workday did not clearly state when all customers will be able to deploy them broadly.
Workday’s approach reflects a broader trend in enterprise AI: moving from informational chatbots to agents that can execute tasks inside business systems. By embedding these agents directly into its HR and finance platform, Workday is attempting to eliminate the friction of switching between tools, ticket queues, and manual approval processes.
If successful, systems like Sana for ITSM and the Travel Agent could turn many everyday workplace processes—from onboarding to travel reimbursement—into simple conversations backed by automated workflows.
Comments
0 comments