DataArt joins Anthropic's Claude services partner network
Thu, 2nd Jul 2026 (Today)
DataArt has joined Anthropic's Claude Partner Network as a Select Partner in the Services Track, adding to its push into data and artificial intelligence services.
The designation places DataArt among service firms that Anthropic says have experience deploying Claude technologies in enterprise settings. Anthropic launched the Services Track to validate partners with certified practitioners, customer deployments and public customer references.
For DataArt, the recognition broadens its formal relationship with one of the better-known providers of generative AI models at a time when corporate spending on AI projects is rising. Companies are under pressure not only to test AI tools but also to move them into day-to-day operations across larger business and technology estates.
Its work tied to Claude includes Claude for Enterprise projects, Claude API integrations, AI-enabled software engineering and consulting focused on production readiness and enterprise adoption. DataArt operates across financial services, healthcare and life sciences, travel, media and entertainment, and retail.
The announcement follows an earlier USD $100 million commitment to expand DataArt's data and AI work. The investment has gone toward engineering, delivery frameworks, workforce training and client innovation programmes as it seeks to deepen its position in a crowded market for AI advisory and implementation work.
Services track
Anthropic's partner structure is divided into Select, Preferred and Global Premier tiers. The Services Track is aimed at firms that build delivery teams around Claude and use them in customer projects.
That framework matters for consulting and engineering companies because customers increasingly want proof that AI suppliers and implementation partners have delivered projects in live environments. In regulated industries especially, buyers tend to seek evidence of governance, technical oversight and operational controls before widening the use of new model-based systems.
DataArt is also building its internal approach around Artisyn, its AI-enabled operating model, which integrates Claude across the software delivery lifecycle. The company says the model has delivered up to 70% faster prototyping, a 30% improvement in development efficiency, and more than 90% accuracy in defined AI use cases.
Those figures reflect a central theme in the AI services market: companies increasingly want measurable commercial outcomes from adoption programmes. While enthusiasm for generative AI remains strong, many large organisations have shifted attention from experimentation to cost, oversight, reliability and return on investment.
Enterprise focus
DataArt has built its business around large organisations operating in what it describes as complex and high-stakes environments. Founded in New York City in 1997, the company now has more than 6,000 engineers across more than 40 locations in the US, the UK, Europe, Latin America, India and the Middle East.
Its client roster includes Priceline, Ocado Technology, Legal & General and Flutter Entertainment. DataArt says it retains 95% of clients, with many relationships lasting more than a decade.
The broader contest among consulting groups, software engineering firms and cloud specialists has intensified as model developers such as Anthropic and OpenAI seek routes into large corporate accounts. Partner programmes have become one way for model companies to scale adoption through third parties that can handle integration, governance and industry-specific deployment work.
For implementation partners, the commercial opportunity lies not only in advisory work but also in embedding AI into software development, business workflows and sector-specific applications. That has created demand for technical teams that can connect models to existing systems while addressing security, compliance and performance concerns.
DataArt plans to expand its work around Claude through certification programmes, engineering enablement and enterprise delivery initiatives. Its latest partner status suggests vendor alliances will remain an important part of its strategy as customers look for experienced intermediaries to manage the move from pilot projects to production systems.
"Organisations are moving beyond early AI experimentation and starting to look more closely at how these technologies operate in real production environments," said Yuri Gubin, Chief Technology Officer, DataArt. "That requires strong engineering capabilities and experience working with large-scale enterprise systems. Being recognized as a Select Partner in the Claude Partner Network Services Track reflects the work our teams have been doing to help clients introduce Claude models into complex business environments, and we're looking forward to continuing to expand those capabilities as demand for enterprise AI adoption continues to grow."