Dell Technologies is betting on AI as companies move from small pilots to full-scale deployments, with the focus now on how organisations can turn AI into measurable results. But scaling AI is not easy. It demands strong infrastructure, reliable data management, and the ability to deploy models quickly in different workflows.
Dell has positioned itself to help companies make the leap. Its AI Factory, Data Lakehouse, and AI Data Platform – developed with support from NVIDIA and other partners – aim to give enterprises the building blocks needed to turn experiments into production systems.
AI News spoke with Christian Spindeldreher, EMEA Field Technology Officer for Data Management and AI at Dell Technologies, about what this shift looks like in practice, and how Dell’s latest developments are being used.
From pilots to measurable outcomes
Spindeldreher explained that Dell’s AI Factory and AI Data Platform, built on the Data Lakehouse, provide a unified foundation for scaling.
“By integrating high-performance infrastructure with streamlined data management and accelerated model development, organisations can move beyond experimentation and deploy AI rapidly in workflows,” he said. The platform also simplifies access, governance, and analytics, giving teams the tools to generate value at scale.
A close partnership with NVIDIA brings compute and software tuned for demanding AI workloads, helping enterprises tackle more complex use cases without losing speed.
Dell’s AI Data Platform unlocks unstructured data
Dell recently added new capabilities to the AI Data Platform, including an unstructured data engine developed with Elastic and GPU-accelerated PowerEdge servers. The allows companies to handle the vast amount of information locked in documents, videos, and images.
“The Elastic-powered unstructured data engine enables real-time semantic and hybrid search, rapid content indexing, and secure access to massive volumes of unstructured data,” Spindeldreher said. This unlocks use cases like AI-driven knowledge retrieval, advanced digital assistants, recommendation systems, and real-time compliance checks.
GPU acceleration, powered by Dell PowerEdge servers and NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPUs, means enterprises can now run agentic AI workflows and multimodal analytics directly on these large datasets. Tasks like video summarisation, synthetic data generation, and generative AI asset management become more practical. “The updates deliver up to six times the token throughput for LLMs, support for more concurrent users, and make high-performance AI compute more accessible,” he said.
Tackling data gravity
One of the challenges in scaling AI is that data often sits in different places, making it expensive and slow to move. Dell’s Data Lakehouse aims to solve this by supporting federated queries in multiple sources.
This means organisations don’t need to create multiple copies of the same dataset. Integrated into a broader Data Fabric, the system ensures consistent access while also supporting domain-oriented Data Mesh principles that give teams autonomy over their own data. The end result, said Spindeldreher, is faster insights without duplication or unnecessary movement.
Dell’s AI Factory drives faster AI adoption
Dell’s AI Factory model has also helped speed adoption in industries where data sensitivity is a major concern. By keeping workloads on-premise, organisations avoid the delays and risks tied to cloud migration and compliance.
“Healthcare, finance, and government have seen faster time-to-value by using advanced AI tools while upholding strict privacy and residency requirements,” Spindeldreher said. Dell also provides services that cover everything from strategy to operations, giving customers a more straightforward path to adoption while managing complexity and risk.
Scaling infrastructure with partners
Partnerships are another part of Dell’s approach. The company is supplying servers for CoreWeave’s rollout of NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPUs, a project that demands high performance and efficient cooling.
“The platforms support the most demanding AI workflows,” Spindeldreher explained. “Scalability is key here – combined with efficient cooling to support maximum performance from rack to full data centre scale.”
Building a unified ecosystem
Behind these updates and partnerships is a broader strategy of integration. Dell’s goal, according to Spindeldreher, is simple: “faster time to value.”
The AI Factory helps customers identify the right use cases, while the Data Platform adds features for data processing, analytics, and secure consumption. Together, they allow organisations to spend less time designing platforms and more time applying AI.
Governance and responsible scaling
As AI spreads in industries, the risks around governance and security are also growing. Spindeldreher highlighted Dell’s work in embedding these principles into its platforms.
“The use of data products and data federation (even in clusters and locations) allows us to consolidate and secure data access,” he said. But he also pointed out that technology alone is not enough – enterprises need data strategies and supporting tools like Data Catalogs to manage compliance in multi-cloud environments.
The future of Dell and AI: what’s next
Looking ahead, Spindeldreher expects enterprises to move deeper into operational AI. Agentic AI, edge AI, and multi-modal systems will play a larger role, supported by new generations of compute, accelerators, and networking.
Dell also sees a place for AI closer to end users. “And not to forget,” he said, “the increasing use of AI on personal devices like AI-enabled PCs and laptops.”
Christian Spindeldreher and the Dell Technologies team will be sharing more insights at this year’s AI & Big Data Expo Europe in Amsterdam on 24-25 September 2025. Spindeldreher will be speaking as part of a presentation session titled ‘The Dell AI and Data Journey’ on day one of the leading industry event.
(Photo by Jay Prajapati)
See also: Dell unveils Nvidia Blackwell-based AI acceleration platform

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