
Neil Shah, vice president for research at Counterpoint Research, said the trend mirrors the earlier bring-your-own-device wave, when personal devices entering the enterprise had to comply with IT policies before they could access company systems.
“There is a need for clear governance and transparency around what data and applications AI agents will access, manipulate, store, and automate,” Shah said. “This is what Kilo is trying to solve with multiple enterprise-grade integrations, admin controls, access controls, and usage analytics. This is a step in the right direction toward bringing enterprise-grade Claw agents into the workplace to drive personal productivity.”
Still, features such as SSO and SCIM are likely to be seen as baseline enterprise requirements rather than major differentiators. Buyers evaluating agent platforms for production use are likely to look for stronger controls around governance, compliance, and oversight.

