What happened and why it matters
The company EPAM has entered a partnership with the startup Cursor to help clients integrate artificial intelligence tools directly into the development environment. The goal is not just to give developers another assistant, but to make AI part of the daily practice of teams in large companies.
How it will work
Cursor offers an environment where prompts, business rules and automated actions can be embedded directly in the code editor — meaning the tool becomes controllable and predictable. EPAM will be responsible for training teams, adapting tools to specific processes and scaling solutions within the corporate environment.
"For AI to truly deliver benefits, you need to change not only the tools but the teams' approach to work."
— EPAM, press release
Why this matters for Ukraine
The Ukrainian AI sector counts about 6,000 specialists, according to a study by AI House and the Ministry of Digital Transformation. Against the backdrop of a slight decline in the average salary of IT managers in summer 2025 (from $3,150 to about $3,000), high-quality and scalable AI adoption could become a marker of trust for international clients and a factor in preserving specialists' competitiveness.
Implementation realities — risks and opportunities
The problem is not a shortage of AI capabilities but of processes: without clear rules, integration into CI/CD and team training, solutions remain experiments. Here EPAM acts as a catalyst — the company has a client base and experience in large-scale transformations, which gives a chance to turn isolated cases into standard practice.
Conclusion
If EPAM and Cursor can implement not just a technical innovation but a change in working practices, this will increase team productivity and lower barriers to adopting AI in products. The question remains practical: will companies undertake systemic changes — and will the Ukrainian IT market be able to use this opportunity to strengthen its position on the international stage?