Zudu appoints new CEO as Scottish AI and software development firm switches to new Edinburgh HQ

Zudu appoints new CEO as Scottish AI and software development firm switches to new Edinburgh HQ

Zudu founder James Buchan and CEO Paul Duffy (credit: Stewart Attwood)

Zudu has appointed Paul Duffy as its new CEO, while the Scottish AI enablement and software development firm has moved its Edinburgh headquarters to Commercial Quay in Leith.

Mr Duffy steps up to the CEO role from managing director as Zudu’s founder James Buchan moves to lead ePass as CEO, a GovTech automation platform for licensing, registration and enforcement, currently rolling out across the public sector.

Zudu, founded in Dundee in 2014, counts the NHS, Asahi, Weir, Wood, ScotRail, Portman Asset Management, and the Scottish Government among its client base.

Mr Duffy said: “While we consider ourselves sector agnostic, we’re also doubling down on sectors where AI enablement and modern software delivery can unlock measurable competitive advantage.

“We’re now firmly on track to be a £10 million plus revenue business with strong pillar clients, deep sector partnerships, while demonstrating digital transformation outcomes for clients across multiple industries.”

Mr Buchan, who will retain a seat on the company’s board, said: “Paul brings a strong commercial and leadership track record, has scaled teams rapidly, strengthening operational structure and shaping board-level strategy in high growth environments.”

Zudu also completed a brand refresh earlier this year which Mr Duffy says signals the company’s intent: “Led by our new electric green identity, Zudu is increasingly seen as bold, confident, and unmistakable in the market.”

Commenting on market trends and dynamics, Mr Duffy added: “What we’re seeing out on the coalface is that the big question for most business leaders is not whether they are adopting enough AI, what’s most important is having the right operational foundations in place.

“Do companies have the delivery capability to close the gap between what the technology can do, and what the business currently allows it to do.”

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