Information discovery platform Dataminr has launched its Dataminr Partner Program, and revealed some big new partners.
The programme, it says, will “dramatically expand customer reach across the corporate market”, while also providing “better enterprise workflow integration” and the “flexibility to procure Dataminr's products through trusted partners”.
Google, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, TD SYNNEX and NEC Networks & System Integration are new participants in the partner ecosystem.
"The Dataminr Partner Program broadens our scale and reach through channel partners and reseller networks, delivers more value for our customers, and powers global sales through partners that can sell the Dataminr solution in their local region," said Aharon Weiner, SVP for global partnerships at Dataminr.
"The programme will accelerate Dataminr's customer growth, optimise workflow integration, unlock new corporate use cases for our AI platform, and also feature numerous benefits and incentives with comprehensive partner resources," he added.
"We have the opportunity to be one of the first participants in the Dataminr Partner Program," said Cheryl Neal, vice president of new vendor acquisition at TD SYNNEX. "Together, we will be able to enrich the breadth and depth of our offerings, ultimately maximising the value of our customers' information and IT investments and unlocking growth for the future."
Dataminr delivers early warnings on high impact events and critical information in advance of other sources, it says. Dataminr aims to enable faster response, more effective risk mitigation and stronger crisis management for public and private sector organisations, spanning global corporations, first responders, NGOs and newsrooms.
Alongside Dataminr's corporate product, Dataminr Pulse, the company provides public sector organisations with its First Alert product for first response, including the United Nations, which relies on First Alert in over 100 countries. Dataminr for News is used by more than 650 newsrooms and by over 30,000 journalists worldwide, says the firm.