Artificial Intelligence:
Resonating with Reason

AI must resonate with your company, your business, and your challenges. It is an essential asset for the future.

At Sopra Steria, we believe that AI, particularly generative AI, should not replace your employees but “augment” them: optimizing time, transforming processes, automating repetitive tasks… Simply put: energizing your collective intelligence.

Our role is to guide companies in identifying the problems that AI can address, whether in customer relations, production processes or prevention. We help deploy AI strategies at the organisational level and advise on instances where this technology can have the best impact.

For example, in the banking sector, our virtual agents optimize customer support by providing quick and personalized responses. In the aerospace industry, we reinvent the supply chain with advanced management of stocks and delivery times. In terms of prevention and security, AI can detect threats through predictive analysis. With over 4,000 experts, we ensure an ethical and responsible use of AI: respecting democratic principles, strengthened by our cybersecurity skills.

We work towards AI that is accessible to all, reasonable, and rational, a driver of progress for both Humanity and the Planet.

 

Generative AI – A $100bn market by 2028 according to Sopra Steria Next

According to a study carried out by Sopra Steria Next, the generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) market is set to grow exponentially between now and 2028.

Read more

Supporting our clients’ AI goals

We support our clients throughout the development and deployment of their AI strategy, from evaluating their existing data management and digital infrastructure through to conceptualising and realising their new AI ambitions.

 

Our strategy is built around four core pillars:

Why our clients choose us

 

Expertise

4,000 Data and AI experts, scientists, engineers, strategists and architects in 30 countries

 

Solutions

From nAIxus to InnerData, leverage our cutting-edge AI tech

 

Partnerships

Take advantage of a vast AI ecosystem

Our news

From Zero to 3,500 AI Agents in Two Months
When people and machines become colleagues, leaders face new challenges: Who governs the agents, what should we prioritize, and how do we ensure that what we do actually creates value? 

| Sylvain D'Hoine

Cloud, code, and common goals: Europe's space challenge
Industrial mergers contrast with fragmented governance: Europe must act fast to stay a global space power.

| Yves Nicolas

Three systemic bugs forcing a rethink of business models
Generative AI, digital dependency and climate risk: three shocks reshaping economic foundations.

Sopra Steria publishes a trend book on Defence, Security and Space

Jun 11, 2026, 17:48 PM
Title* : Sopra Steria publishes a trend book on Defence, Security and Space

Ten trends, one conviction: in a ‘war of saturation’, superiority is no longer won without speed of processing, data and intelligent mass. 

Ten trends, one conviction: in a ‘war of saturation’, superiority is no longer won by the costliest weaponry alone, but by speed of processing, data and intelligent mass. 

Paris, 10 June 2026 – A few days before Eurosatory 2026 opens, and against an accelerating geopolitical backdrop, Sopra Steria, a major Tech player in Europe, is publishing its ‘Defence, Security & Space’ trend book, decoding the shifts that are reshaping European defence.  

Its central thread: in a ‘war of saturation’, superiority is no longer measured by the power of platforms and software, but by the ability to decide and act faster than the adversary. For Europe’s armed forces, agencies and industry, strategic autonomy is no longer a distant horizon: it has become an immediate operational imperative. 

Why now: strategic value has shifted 

In Ukraine as in the Levant, drones costing a few thousand euros are destroying equipment worth millions, and software updated in a matter of weeks is gaining the upper hand over systems designed to last twenty years. The figures compiled by Sopra Steria bear out this shift: $417 billion as the global cost of disinformation (15 per cent of French GDP), a ratio of 1 to 20 between an attack drone and the missile sent to intercept it, 70 to 80 per cent of Ukrainian losses caused by drones, and €800 billion in capability needs identified by the European Commission’s Readiness 2030 plan. 

The trend book identifies ten trends grouped around three imperatives: 

  1. Monitor and absorb saturation  
    • Win the war before the war: act in the information domain 
    • Strengthen air defence through counter-drone capabilities 
    • Give Europe a space defence capability 
    • Orchestrate multi-domain military action 
  2. Act faster than the adversary  
    • Build a sovereign, secure and trusted defence AI 
    • Share and exploit data in operations 
    • Move from exploration to action with quantum 
  3. Build and regenerate over the long term  
    • Restore strategic depth 
    • Integrate drones into combat at scale 
    • Structure new models of defence innovation 

These trends are not forecasting exercises: they describe what is already unfolding in the theatres of operations. The only question that remains is one of tempo. 

How do you keep the advantage in the face of saturation? 

The answer lies less in a catalogue of technologies than in the ability to connect systems, data and players. This is the role Sopra Steria lays claim to: that of a defence industrial player that is at once part of the defence technological and industrial base and a digital services company, working for interoperability, sovereign digital technology and trust. A concrete example: the BOREADES counter-drone command-and-control system, developed by Sopra Steria over more than ten years and proven at numerous major national and international sporting events in recent years. 

Benoît Chatelain, Director of the Defence, Security and Space vertical at Sopra Steria, says: ‘This analysis shows that while digital technology is not enough to win a war, no advantage is possible without it. Data, AI and interoperability now determine superiority, and at a time when Europe is rearming, Sopra Steria’s ambition is to be its trusted partner, in defence as in space’. 

Download the full trend book 

Download a digest 

Key points

  • Sopra Steria is publishing Next Perspectives Defence, Security and Space, a trend book on the ten trends reshaping the defence sector in Europe, ahead of Eurosatory 2026. 
  • The central thread: in a ‘war of saturation’ (informational, air-defence, space, logistics), superiority is no longer measured by the power of technological platforms, but by speed of adaptation, command of data and the capacity for mass production. 
  • Three structuring imperatives for Europe’s armed forces, agencies and industry: monitor and absorb saturation, act faster than the adversary, build and regenerate over the long term. 
  • Sopra Steria lays claim to a distinctive position: a new kind of defence industrial player, both part of the defence world and a digital services company, working for interoperability and European digital sovereignty. 
Tags :
PR_NP_DS2

Client story

How AI is powering support services for EDF employees
World leader in low-carbon energy generation EDF wanted an innovative tech solution to ease pressure on IT support teams while also boosting service quality. AMY was the answer. 
Read more

Press Release

Sopra Steria publishes a trend book on Defence, Security and Space

Jun 11, 2026, 17:48 PM
Title* : Sopra Steria publishes a trend book on Defence, Security and Space

Ten trends, one conviction: in a ‘war of saturation’, superiority is no longer won without speed of processing, data and intelligent mass. 

Ten trends, one conviction: in a ‘war of saturation’, superiority is no longer won by the costliest weaponry alone, but by speed of processing, data and intelligent mass. 

Paris, 10 June 2026 – A few days before Eurosatory 2026 opens, and against an accelerating geopolitical backdrop, Sopra Steria, a major Tech player in Europe, is publishing its ‘Defence, Security & Space’ trend book, decoding the shifts that are reshaping European defence.  

Its central thread: in a ‘war of saturation’, superiority is no longer measured by the power of platforms and software, but by the ability to decide and act faster than the adversary. For Europe’s armed forces, agencies and industry, strategic autonomy is no longer a distant horizon: it has become an immediate operational imperative. 

Why now: strategic value has shifted 

In Ukraine as in the Levant, drones costing a few thousand euros are destroying equipment worth millions, and software updated in a matter of weeks is gaining the upper hand over systems designed to last twenty years. The figures compiled by Sopra Steria bear out this shift: $417 billion as the global cost of disinformation (15 per cent of French GDP), a ratio of 1 to 20 between an attack drone and the missile sent to intercept it, 70 to 80 per cent of Ukrainian losses caused by drones, and €800 billion in capability needs identified by the European Commission’s Readiness 2030 plan. 

The trend book identifies ten trends grouped around three imperatives: 

  1. Monitor and absorb saturation  
    • Win the war before the war: act in the information domain 
    • Strengthen air defence through counter-drone capabilities 
    • Give Europe a space defence capability 
    • Orchestrate multi-domain military action 
  2. Act faster than the adversary  
    • Build a sovereign, secure and trusted defence AI 
    • Share and exploit data in operations 
    • Move from exploration to action with quantum 
  3. Build and regenerate over the long term  
    • Restore strategic depth 
    • Integrate drones into combat at scale 
    • Structure new models of defence innovation 

These trends are not forecasting exercises: they describe what is already unfolding in the theatres of operations. The only question that remains is one of tempo. 

How do you keep the advantage in the face of saturation? 

The answer lies less in a catalogue of technologies than in the ability to connect systems, data and players. This is the role Sopra Steria lays claim to: that of a defence industrial player that is at once part of the defence technological and industrial base and a digital services company, working for interoperability, sovereign digital technology and trust. A concrete example: the BOREADES counter-drone command-and-control system, developed by Sopra Steria over more than ten years and proven at numerous major national and international sporting events in recent years. 

Benoît Chatelain, Director of the Defence, Security and Space vertical at Sopra Steria, says: ‘This analysis shows that while digital technology is not enough to win a war, no advantage is possible without it. Data, AI and interoperability now determine superiority, and at a time when Europe is rearming, Sopra Steria’s ambition is to be its trusted partner, in defence as in space’. 

Download the full trend book 

Download a digest 

Key points

  • Sopra Steria is publishing Next Perspectives Defence, Security and Space, a trend book on the ten trends reshaping the defence sector in Europe, ahead of Eurosatory 2026. 
  • The central thread: in a ‘war of saturation’ (informational, air-defence, space, logistics), superiority is no longer measured by the power of technological platforms, but by speed of adaptation, command of data and the capacity for mass production. 
  • Three structuring imperatives for Europe’s armed forces, agencies and industry: monitor and absorb saturation, act faster than the adversary, build and regenerate over the long term. 
  • Sopra Steria lays claim to a distinctive position: a new kind of defence industrial player, both part of the defence world and a digital services company, working for interoperability and European digital sovereignty. 
Tags :
PR_NP_DS2

Contact our experts