Latest news with #Ventia
Yahoo
11-07-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
DXC Technology's AI-Powered Tendia Solution Slashes Bid Writing Time for Ventia
DXC Technology Company (NYSE:DXC) is one of the cheap IT stocks hedge funds are buying. On July 3, DXC Technology announced the deployment of an AI-driven bid writing solution called Tendia for Ventia. Ventia is one of the largest essential infrastructure service providers in Australia and New Zealand. The new platform significantly reduces the time required to draft initial bid responses for major infrastructure contracts, cutting it from days to minutes, thereby enhancing Ventia's ability to quickly respond to complex and high-value tenders. The Tendia solution was developed in collaboration with DXC and was deployed in just 4 months. An IT security specialist inspecting a corporate network server for any malicious activity. It works by automating the time-consuming process of sourcing and synthesizing information from extensive document libraries. Tendia allows their teams to focus on higher-value work, deliver more accurate proposals, and respond more quickly to multi-million-dollar tenders. DXC Technology Company (NYSE:DXC) provides IT services and solutions internationally. While we acknowledge the potential of DXC as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the . READ NEXT: and . Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.

Sky News AU
11-07-2025
- Business
- Sky News AU
Union slams Ventia as court security staff demand ‘same job, same pay'
Court security staff have walked off the job for eight hours, accusing the firm responsible for Western Australia's court security, of backflipping on key safety agreements. The court security and custodial officers said the company Ventia had mismanaged negotiations, caused delay, and dishonoured previously agreed terms. Members of the Transport Workers Union rallied outside Perth's Supreme Court Gardens, sending what they say is a 'direct message' to Ventia and the WA government to 'fix this contract now.' TWU WA state secretary Tim Dawson said workers had been pushed to the brink by poor wages, unsafe staffing levels and what the union described as a backflip on already agreed conditions. 'Ventia's latest offer is an insult. They're playing games with our safety and our livelihoods,' Mr Dawson said. 'The message we're sending on Friday is crystal clear: we will not accept inferior wages, broken promises or disrespect. Fix this contract now.' The protest, which began at 7.30am, follows months of frustration among security officers, who say they are still waiting for fair pay despite the Cook Labor government injecting an extra $6m into the contract earlier this year. The workers are demanding pay parity with counterparts employed by private security firm G4S. The TWU says the company has failed to deliver on safer rosters and other agreed improvements, adding that chronic understaffing continues to place officers at risk. 'Workers will not stop until they win fair wages, safety and respect,' the union said in a statement. It's the second major strike by Ventia-employed court security officers this year, after a similar eight-hour action was held in January. Originally published as 'Enough is enough': Court security officers walk off the job

News.com.au
11-07-2025
- Business
- News.com.au
‘Enough is enough': Court security officers walk off the job
Court security staff have walked off the job for eight hours, accusing the firm responsible for Western Australia's court security, of backflipping on key safety agreements. The court security and custodial officers said the company Ventia had mismanaged negotiations, caused delay, and dishonoured previously agreed terms. Members of the Transport Workers Union rallied outside Perth's Supreme Court Gardens, sending what they say is a 'direct message' to Ventia and the WA government to 'fix this contract now.' TWU WA state secretary Tim Dawson said workers had been pushed to the brink by poor wages, unsafe staffing levels and what the union described as a backflip on already agreed conditions. 'Ventia's latest offer is an insult. They're playing games with our safety and our livelihoods,' Mr Dawson said. 'The message we're sending on Friday is crystal clear: we will not accept inferior wages, broken promises or disrespect. Fix this contract now.' The protest, which began at 7.30am, follows months of frustration among security officers, who say they are still waiting for fair pay despite the Cook Labor government injecting an extra $6m into the contract earlier this year. The workers are demanding pay parity with counterparts employed by private security firm G4S. The TWU says the company has failed to deliver on safer rosters and other agreed improvements, adding that chronic understaffing continues to place officers at risk. 'Workers will not stop until they win fair wages, safety and respect,' the union said in a statement. It's the second major strike by Ventia-employed court security officers this year, after a similar eight-hour action was held in January.


Perth Now
11-07-2025
- Business
- Perth Now
Court security officers strike over pay
Court security staff have walked off the job for eight hours, accusing the firm responsible for Western Australia's court security, of backflipping on key safety agreements. The court security and custodial officers said the company Ventia had mismanaged negotiations, caused delay, and dishonoured previously agreed terms. Assistant Secretary of the TWU speaking at a rally outside the Ventia office, where court security staff walked off the job in protest. NewsWire/Philip Gostelow Credit: News Corp Australia Members of the Transport Workers Union rallied outside Perth's Supreme Court Gardens, sending what they say is a 'direct message' to Ventia and the WA government to 'fix this contract now.' TWU WA state secretary Tim Dawson said workers had been pushed to the brink by poor wages, unsafe staffing levels and what the union described as a backflip on already agreed conditions. 'Ventia's latest offer is an insult. They're playing games with our safety and our livelihoods,' Mr Dawson said. Court Security and Custodial Officers employed by Ventia, walked off their jobs in protest against Ventia's failed handling of their enterprise agreement negotiations. Perth, WA. NewsWire/Philip Gostelow Credit: News Corp Australia 'The message we're sending on Friday is crystal clear: we will not accept inferior wages, broken promises or disrespect. Fix this contract now.' The protest, which began at 7.30am, follows months of frustration among security officers, who say they are still waiting for fair pay despite the Cook Labor government injecting an extra $6m into the contract earlier this year. The workers are demanding pay parity with counterparts employed by private security firm G4S. Members of the Transport Workers Union said they're done waiting while their safety, conditions and pay are ignored. NewsWire/Philip Gostelow Credit: News Corp Australia The TWU says the company has failed to deliver on safer rosters and other agreed improvements, adding that chronic understaffing continues to place officers at risk. 'Workers will not stop until they win fair wages, safety and respect,' the union said in a statement. It's the second major strike by Ventia-employed court security officers this year, after a similar eight-hour action was held in January.


United News of India
03-07-2025
- Business
- United News of India
DXC Technology deploys AI-driven bid writing solution for Ventia
New Delhi, July 3 (UNI) DXC Technology, a global IT service provider, revealed the successful deployment of an AI-enabled bid writing solution for Ventia. The AI-driven bid writing solution, named 'Tendia,' will automate the process of search, collation, and drafting of early-stage bid content. By leveraging automation with an AI-powered bid writing solution, the time required to draft initial bid responses is also reduced. Tendia gets completed in just four months and is already revolutionizing the bid development process. With built-in AI capacities, this system is extensively trained on more of Ventia's historical submissions to ensure the relevancy and accuracy of the final result. Em Hogan (Ventia's General Manager for Strategy, Digital & Corporate Affairs) said, 'Collaborating with DXC allows us to improve our speed and reliability of bid development processes.' Emphasizing automation, he added, 'Tendia enables our teams to give their attention to higher-value tasks. We can now deliver more accurate proposals and respond quickly to multi-million dollar tenders. Project Tendia is the first phase of Ventia's AI adoption strategy.' To build the AI-powered solution, DXC's Data & AI teams used different technologies like Amazon Fargate, Kendra, Cognito, and others. Seelan Nayagam (President, APAC or Middle East & Africa DXC Technology) said, 'The collaboration with Ventia is highlighting the potential of AI in supporting business-critical operations. We have drawn on our relevant industry experience to help Ventia.' The deployment of Tendia comes at a time when there's an increasing demand for efficiency and reliability in high-stakes processes. By leveraging automation, Ventia is expecting to dedicate more time to understanding the needs of different clients and drafting proposals. UNI SAS SS