ICS.AI has launched a national higher education model aimed at widening student access to enterprise AI, arguing that uneven access is becoming a direct employability issue for UK universities. Announced during the UCISA Leadership Summit, the new approach is designed to extend governed AI capability to students through the same institutional platform used by staff.
The company says the problem is now large enough to affect how graduates enter the labour market. In its launch materials, ICS.AI said 2.9 million students are enrolled in UK higher education, yet fewer than 5% currently have access to structured, institutional AI capability. It also said 57% of employers report an AI skills gap, creating a disconnect between what workplaces increasingly expect and what many students can practise in a governed setting before they graduate.
Under the model, universities adopt the ICS.AI staff platform as a managed enterprise environment for employees. Once that is in place, student access is included at no additional cost to the institution. ICS.AI is presenting that as a way to move beyond fragmented pilots or selective access schemes and towards an institution-wide baseline for AI capability, oversight, and compliance.
Martin Neale, founder and CEO of ICS.AI, said: “Students with access to AI tools, training and safe institutional environments are starting to build practical experience and confidence. Those without access risk leaving university less prepared for the workplace, despite having the same academic potential. In time, that gap may become one of the defining drivers of graduate employability.”
Universities are under pressure to improve student outcomes and employability while managing tight budgets, and the company argues that buying AI access at student scale through conventional commercial pricing can quickly become prohibitive. ICS.AI says a university with 20,000 students could see annual AI costs run into the millions, placing universal access beyond reach for many institutions.
Neale added: “Students are caught between a shrinking floor and a rising bar. Entry-level opportunities are changing, while employer expectations around AI are rising fast. The danger is that AI becomes another dividing line in education: available to the confident, the well-funded or the self-financed, but not to everyone.”
ICS.AI says the platform is built for institutional rather than consumer use, with governance, auditability, compliance controls, local data grounding, and data sovereignty. The company’s argument is that higher education should not treat student AI access as a loose add-on or a chatbot perk, but as part of a structured environment where staff productivity, student learning, and future credentialing can sit on the same governed foundation.
The launch positions AI access as both an operational and social equity issue for universities. It also points to a broader shift in the sector, where the question is moving from whether students will use AI to how institutions provide it safely, consistently, and at scale.




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