Datalake and warehouse

Data solutions

a21.ai offers a comprehensive data management suite including accelerated data lake setup, data warehouse creation and modernization, unified data platform development, and cloud foundations and database migrations, focusing on security, scalability, and AI-driven analytics.

Our Services

DataLake Setup

Accelerated setup of fully functional

data infrastructure

  • Automated data lake creationDevelop a centralized data lake to securely and cost-effectively ingest, store, and analyze large volumes of diverse, full-fidelity data and manage cost at a per-gigabyte level.
  • UI-driven data lake lifecycle and processing cluster management
  • Enhanced access controls through integration with Ranger, Atlas, and LDAP

Datalake Data warehouse creation & Modernization

Dynamic, scalable warehouses to meet

real-time changing needs

  • Ingest hundreds of batch and real-time feeds with multi-TB volume
  • Automatically detect anomalies in batch and real-time data using AI
  • Take timely action on data inconsistencies to improve data quality
  • Enterprise Data Warehouse Modernization: Leverage Cloud platforms to migrate, store, optimize, and transform traditional enterprise data warehouses like, Teradata, Netezza, Oracle, Hadoop and SQL Server, for enterprise-wide consumption and generation of analytical insights

Unified Data Platform

  • Unlock meaningful insights from petabytes of data from multiple sources
  • Simplify underlying architecture and service integration complexities

Cloud Foundations & Database Migrations

  • Design and build an optimized, secure, automated and centralized foundational infrastructure, to move data workloads and applications into a scalable and established cloud environment.
  • Migrate relational, non-relational, and distributed databases across workloads from on-premise and cloud sources to create, upgrade and consolidate enterprise data platforms.

Our solution accelerators

Claims Control Towers 2.0: Transitioning from Passive Visibility to Predictive Intervention

The insurance industry has spent the last five years chasing “visibility.” In the first wave of digital transformation, the goal was the “Claims Control Tower 1.0″—a centralized dashboard that aggregated data from various siloed systems to give claims managers a “single pane of glass” view of their operations. While this provided much-needed clarity on cycle times and pending volumes, it remained fundamentally reactive. By the time a claim appeared as a “red” outlier on a dashboard in 2024, the leakage had already occurred, the customer was already frustrated, and the Loss Adjustment Expense (LAE) had already spiked.

The Digital Clerk: Transitioning to Autonomous Court Filings in 2026

The legal industry has long been haunted by the “administrative tax”—the thousands of non-billable hours consumed by the high-stakes, low-variability tasks of document assembly, metadata tagging, and jurisdictional filing. Historically, the “Clerk of the Court” was a human gatekeeper, and the “Legal Assistant” was the manual bridge between an attorney’s work product and the judicial record. However, as we move through 2026, the volume of litigation and the complexity of multi-district electronic filing systems (e-filing) have surpassed the limits of manual human processing.

Pharma customer experience has two recurring needs: give accurate, cited answers to medical questions and capture clean evidence from the field. Multi-Modal AI solves both in a single workflow.

Market Access Agents: Navigating the Global Reimbursement Labyrinth with Agentic Intelligence

In the pharmaceutical landscape of 2026, the “moment of truth” has shifted. It is no longer found solely in the laboratory or even in the successful conclusion of a Phase III clinical trial. Instead, the survival of a therapeutic asset—and by extension, the patients who rely on it—is decided in the boardrooms of Health Technology Assessment (HTA) bodies and national payers. We have entered the era of the “Value-Based Mandate,” where scientific efficacy is merely the entry fee, and the true currency is evidence of cost-effectiveness and real-world impact.

Wealth Management Agents: Redefining Fiduciary Duty in the Age of Autonomy

The transition from traditional digital wealth management to Agentic Financial Advisory represents the most significant shift in fiduciary responsibility since the passage of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. In 2026, the financial services sector has moved beyond the “Chatbot Era.” We have entered an age where autonomous agents do not merely suggest portfolios; they execute trades, manage tax-loss harvesting, and negotiate complex private market entries on behalf of clients. For BFSI (Banking, Financial Services, and Insurance) leaders, this shift necessitates a fundamental re-evaluation of Fiduciary Duty.

Underwriting the Unseen: Harnessing Satellite & IoT Feeds through Agentic AI

For over a century, the insurance industry operated on the “Law of Large Numbers” and the rearview mirror of historical proxies. Underwriting was a game of averages: if you lived in a certain zip code or drove a certain make of car, you were bucketed into a risk profile based on what people like you did five years ago. But in 2026, the rearview mirror has shattered. The volatility of the modern climate, the complexity of global supply chains, and the rise of hyper-connected industrial assets have rendered static actuarial tables insufficient.

Autonomous Discovery: Unleashing Agentic Intelligence on Non-Textual Evidence

The year 2026 marks a structural realignment in the legal industry. For decades, the “Electronic Discovery Reference Model” (EDRM) focused predominantly on the textual—emails, PDFs, and spreadsheets were the primary currency of litigation. However, the modern enterprise ecosystem now generates a staggering volume of non-textual data: CCTV footage, Slack voice notes, Zoom recordings, Building Information Modeling (BIM) data, and IoT sensor logs. This “Dark Data” now comprises over 80% of the potentially discoverable material in complex litigation.

Agentic-AI-Debt-Collectoion

Real-Time Treasury: The Definitive Guide to Agentic Liquidity Management

The traditional treasury function has long been defined by the “Batch Paradigm”—a world characterized by end-of-day reporting, T+2 settlement cycles, and retrospective liquidity snapshots that are frequently obsolete by the time they reach the CFO’s desk. In 2026, as global markets move toward 24/7/365 instant settlement cycles and Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) transition from pilot phases to operational reality, this “latency gap” is no longer just an operational nuisance; it is a profound systemic risk.

Real-Time Treasury: Transitioning to Agentic Liquidity Management

The traditional treasury function has long been defined by the “Batch Paradigm”—a world of end-of-day reports, T+2 settlements, and retrospective liquidity snapshots that are often obsolete by the time they reach the CFO’s desk. In 2026, as global markets move toward 24/7/365 instant settlement cycles and Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) become operational reality, the “latency gap” is no longer just an operational nuisance; it is a systemic risk.

The Authenticity API: Verifying Agentic Identity in a Zero-Trust World

In the digital ecosystem of 2026, the internet is no longer a place where humans interact with machines; it is a dense, high-velocity network where agents interact with agents. As organizations deploy autonomous fleets to handle everything from supply chain negotiation to customer support, a fundamental crisis of trust has emerged. When an agent knocks on your server’s “digital door,” how do you know it is who it claims to be?

Adversarial Agency: Red-Teaming Your Workforce for the Autonomous Era

In the enterprise landscape of 2026, “Human Resources” has evolved into “Resource Orchestration.” Organizations no longer just manage people; they manage a hybrid fleet of human specialists, autonomous agents, and multi-model swarms. However, as the complexity of the agentic workforce grows, so does the “Attack Surface of Logic.” If an agent is empowered to move money, negotiate contracts, or alter clinical care plans, it becomes a target—not just for hackers, but for Logic Exploitation.