Hyland expands AI product leadership

Hyland expands AI product leadership

Hyland has expanded leadership as regulated sectors adopt AI. The enterprise content management company has named six product leaders as it targets more autonomous operations in tightly governed industries.


The new appointments are focused on industries where records, documents, and governed content sit at the centre of daily operations, including healthcare, financial services, insurance, education, and government. In those environments, the company argues, AI adoption depends less on generic automation and more on systems that can keep content secure, auditable, and available at the right point in a workflow.

For Hyland, the reshuffle extends a sector-led strategy it says has been in place for more than three decades. The company also pointed to its recent recognition as a Leader in the 2026 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Document Management, linking that result to its work in regulated, content-rich industries and to the industry-specific design of its products.

Michael Campbell, chief product officer at Hyland, said: “In highly regulated industries, AI success isn’t about experimentation — it’s about trust, compliance, and measurable outcomes. Our expanded product leadership reflects our conviction that the future of the agentic enterprise will be built on industry-specific context, AI-native content foundations, and the operational rigour our customers depend on. That is where Hyland has always invested, and where we are investing next.”

The six appointments cover both sector-specific leadership and broader operational workflows. Vinitha Ramnathan will lead healthcare product strategy, with a focus on clinical, revenue cycle, and patient experience solutions. Robert Seres has taken responsibility for government products built around transparency, security, records governance, and citizen-centric digital services, while Namit Saksena will lead financial services strategy across banking and capital markets.

Elsewhere, Kathy Hrach will guide insurance product strategy spanning claims, policy, and underwriting transformation. Rebecca Whitworth has been appointed to lead education industry strategy, focused on student, administrative, and information management processes, and Megan Caraballo will oversee cross-industry solutions in areas including invoice processing, employee file management, and contracts management.

Across enterprise software, suppliers are putting greater weight on sector expertise as customers look for AI tools that fit existing compliance, governance, and operational frameworks. Hyland’s latest appointments suggest the company sees that requirement as a product question as much as a sales one.

More information on the company’s platform and solutions is available through Hyland’s website.



  • GHG Protocol resignation raises governance pressure

    GHG Protocol resignation raises governance pressure

    GHG Protocol faces renewed scrutiny after a board resignation. The dispute raises governance questions around carbon accounting standards used in corporate climate reporting.


  • Cardiff Capital Region secures £134m funding

    Cardiff Capital Region secures £134m funding

    Cardiff Capital Region has passed its second UK Gateway Review. The approval unlocks £134 million in UK Government funding to support economic growth, jobs, skills, and priority sectors across South East Wales over the next five years.


  • AI readiness gap widens at work

    AI readiness gap widens at work

    AI use is rising faster than workforce readiness levels. Skillsoft says 86% of employees use AI, but only 24% feel fully equipped.