Saudi-based Humain has partnered with US artificial intelligence firm Turing to develop what the companies describe as the first marketplace for enterprise-grade AI agents. The agreement was announced during the FII Priority Summit in Miami.
The marketplace will be hosted on Humain’s platform, Humain One, and is designed to enable businesses to discover, deploy, and scale AI agents. These are software systems capable of autonomously executing tasks across functions such as human resources, finance, legal, operations, and procurement.
“The SaaS era transformed productivity, but the next chapter is agentic, where software executes workflows instead of only supporting them,” said Humain CEO Tareq Amin. “Humain One is our vision for the enterprise operating system of the AI era.”
Backed by the Public Investment Fund, Humain will contribute AI infrastructure and model orchestration capabilities, while Turing will provide expertise in model evaluation, fine-tuning, and reasoning systems.
The platform will also allow third-party developers to publish and commercialize AI agents through a shared marketplace, creating a new layer in the emerging AI agent economy.
Turing is set to become the first US-based customer of Humain One, a move both companies say highlights Saudi Arabia’s growing role not only as a consumer of AI technologies but also as a developer and exporter.
Turing Founder & CEO Jonathan Siddharth said the initiative represents a step toward making advanced AI economically transformative, adding that the partnership is expected to accelerate AI deployment in Saudi Arabia and globally.
The announcement underscores Saudi Arabia’s broader efforts to position itself as a global AI hub, with the Public Investment Fund directing significant investments toward AI infrastructure and platforms as part of Saudi Vision 2030.