TechCrunch is partnering with VivaTech 2026 to highlight the technologies, founders, and ideas driving the next wave of innovation. As part of the collaboration, TechCrunch and VivaTech will spotlight emerging startups through the VivaTech Innovation of the Year competition. The winner will earn a chance to pitch live in Paris and secure a place in Startup Battlefield 200 ahead of TechCrunch Disrupt 2026, taking place in San Francisco from October 13-15.

For anyone tracking the future of enterprise AI, VivaTech 2026 offers a front-row seat to some of the industry’s most important conversations. Register now to hear from the leaders building the next generation of AI infrastructure, applications, and operational systems.

For the past several years, the global AI race has largely been defined by foundation models, chatbot launches, and the battle for consumer attention. But beneath that public competition, another ecosystem has been gaining momentum — one centered on enterprise infrastructure, operational systems, and industrial AI.

While Silicon Valley continues pushing aggressively into large language models and consumer-facing AI products, many European companies are focused on applying AI to complex systems already embedded into everyday life: Manufacturing. Logistics. Healthcare. Cybersecurity. Energy infrastructure.

These industries are quickly becoming some of the most important battlegrounds in the AI economy. They also require far more than powerful models alone. That’s where Europe believes it may have an advantage.

Deploying AI inside large organizations introduces a different set of challenges altogether: governance, compliance, security, operational reliability, and long-term integration. In many ways, the industry is now confronting the realities of moving AI from experimentation to production at scale.

That shift will loom large at VivaTech 2026, which has increasingly become a showcase for Europe’s growing enterprise AI ambitions.

For many enterprises, the first wave of AI adoption was relatively experimental. Companies rushed to test copilots, automate workflows, and explore generative AI use cases across their organizations. But as the technology matures, the conversation is becoming significantly more complicated.

Now comes the hard part: Enterprises are confronting questions around governance, compliance, infrastructure, and security that many companies barely considered during the first wave of AI experimentation.

Increasingly, startups are being judged less on novelty and more on whether they can integrate into existing enterprise environments, navigate regulatory complexity, and deliver measurable operational value. Investors are starting to prioritize infrastructure, deployment, and measurable outcomes over pure experimentation.

At VivaTech 2026, those realities are expected to shape many of the conversations happening across the event floor.

Europe will argue that the next phase of the AI race may be won not just by building models, but also by deploying them effectively at scale. Join the discussion in Paris and see how founders, investors, and enterprise leaders are approaching AI’s transition from experimentation to production.

Source: https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/10/why-enterprise-ai-will-be-a-major-focus-at-vivatech-2026/