Introducing Sana from Workday: Superintelligence for work
What happened
With Sana Enterprise, agents can find, orchestrate, and automate work across not only Workday, but all of the enterprise systems and applications employees use every day. These bolt-on AI tools often fail to deliver enterprise-grade accuracy because they don’t share the same data, compliance context, and business rules as core systems they operate on. This matters for Site Services & Facilities because capacity and lead-time signals can move supplier prioritization, award timing, and contingency lanes with 300 as the clearest commercial anchors; buyers should plan for scope change requests
Buyer takeaway
For Site Services & Facilities, this is mainly an availability and execution signal; sequencing, fallback coverage, and supplier responsiveness may matter more than list price
Cost / money
Tighter availability often shows up later as expediting, standby, or substitution cost. The immediate job is to see where delays could become avoidable spend
Supplier / commercial
Capacity pressure usually strengthens supplier leverage. Check who can still commit on timing, what backup coverage exists, and whether current contract language protects against slippage
Safety / operations
Where supplier availability tightens, schedule pressure can spill into safety or quality risk if teams start accepting late substitutions or compressed mobilization windows
What to watch
Watch lead times, crew or vessel allocation, and whether suppliers are quietly narrowing commitment windows before the next sourcing gate
Key facts
- With Sana Enterprise, agents can find, orchestrate, and automate work across not only Workday
- These bolt-on AI tools often fail to deliver enterprise-grade accuracy because they don’t sha
- It’s not just a new Workday experience – it’s a powerful way for people to search, reason, an
- ” AI agents grounded in Workday’s people and finance data Unlike standalone assistants or cop
