A surge in demand for machine-learning expertise is pushing employers to secure scarce talent through acquisitions, as consultancy Accenture agreed to buy London AI firm Faculty.
The $1 billion deal, announced last week, is expected to bring more than 400 data scientists and engineers into Accenture, alongside Faculty’s leadership team and its decision intelligence product.
The acquisition adds to signs that businesses are competing harder for technical skills that support automation, forecasting and safety-focused deployment of new tools. While many organisations are still experimenting with new systems, they are also trying to build the internal capability to use them in core operations rather than isolated pilots.
The move is likely to be watched closely by HR teams balancing buy versus build decisions, especially in a market where specialists can be difficult to recruit and where training pathways are under scrutiny.
A talent-driven deal, with leadership moves
Accenture, a global professional services company advising organisations on strategy, technology and operations, said it had agreed to acquire Faculty, a London-based artificial intelligence services and products business. Accenture said completion was subject to customary conditions, including regulatory approval, and that financial terms were not disclosed.
Accenture said Faculty’s team of more than 400 professionals would integrate into its workforce. It confirmed that Faculty chief executive Marc Warner would take on the role of chief technology officer at Accenture and join its global management committee.
Accenture chair and chief executive Julie Sweet said the purchase was intended to accelerate the firm’s work integrating advanced tools into client operations. “With Faculty, we will further accelerate our strategy to bring trusted, advanced AI to the heart of our clients’ businesses,” she said. “I’m pleased to welcome the Faculty team to Accenture and look forward to Marc’s contribution shaping our technology vision and strategy as chief technology officer.”
Warner presented the deal as a way to scale Faculty’s work and extend its focus on safe deployment. “Our vision has always been a world in which safe AI delivers widespread benefits to humanity. We have spent the last ten years supporting our clients to bring this world about, step by step,” he said.
“As AI advances rapidly, the ambition of our clients is now, rightly, no less than the reinvention of their business. I am delighted that by teaming up with Accenture, we have everything in place to support AI transformation from start to finish.”
Why AI capability is becoming harder to hire
Research group PwC has reported that the share of UK job postings requiring AI-related skills rose strongly over the long term, even as the overall job market cooled in 2024. The analysis also found that the total number of AI jobs peaked in 2022, and that while postings dipped slightly between 2023 and 2024, demand for skills remained high as a growing proportion of roles called for them.
Government-backed work has also pointed to gaps in training and progression routes. Skills England, a body focused on England’s workforce needs, published analysis in late 2025 examining upskilling barriers and opportunities across growth sectors, alongside tools intended to support employers and training providers.
The message for many HR functions, experts say, is that recruitment alone is not enough, and that structured development routes are increasingly part of talent strategy for technical roles.
The Confederation of British Industry, which represents employers, made a similar point in research published earlier this month on building an AI-ready workforce. It said many organisations were experimenting with the technology but lacked consistent access to training, guidance and capability to scale adoption. It also noted that roles and entry pathways were changing faster than skills systems were adapting.
In that context, acquisitions can look like a shortcut to workforce capability, providing a ready-made team with specialist experience, established processes and a pipeline of early-career talent.
Training and progression, not only recruitment
Accenture said it planned to leverage Faculty’s Fellowship Programme, an early-career training and placement scheme designed to help science and engineering graduates, including PhD and master’s graduates as well as post-doctoral researchers, transition from academia into industry. Accenture said it intended to extend the programme beyond the UK.
The focus on structured early career development is notable because competition for experienced hires remains intense and salary pressure can make retention fragile. In practice, many organisations are trying to reduce dependency on a small pool of senior specialists by creating clearer progression routes, supporting managers who oversee technical teams and widening access to training for workers moving into data and engineering roles.
Accenture’s statement also tied the deal to work on responsible deployment, including AI safety and risk controls. It said Faculty had worked with AI lab OpenAI and AI company Anthropic, and with UK institute the AI Security Institute, in relation to safety assessments and safe adoption. This area is increasingly relevant for HR and people risk teams, particularly where new tools alter job design, performance measurement and workplace decision-making.
The acquisition also underlines a wider question for organisations trying to scale capability. Where specialist roles are hard to fill, employers are likely to rely more on internal training, targeted partnerships with universities and providers, and, for large firms with the balance sheet to do it, buying teams outright.
