Mantel Group and Atlassian win global Databricks partner awards

News
14 Jun 20242 mins
Business OperationsIT LeadershipSoftware Development

Mantel Group scores APJ Emerging Business Partner of the Year, while Built on Partner of the Year went to Atlassian.

Emma Bromet (Mantel Group)
Credit: Emma Bromet (Mantel Group)

Mantel Group and Atlassian have been recognised at Databricks’ global partner awards for 2024.

The awards, which were presented at the software vendor’s Data + AI Summit and cover 39 categories, recognises partners for their achievements and collaboration with Databricks in the last year.

“These awards underscore the remarkable work accomplished in partnership with our ISV, consulting and system integrator partners, who have contributed their profound industry knowledge, technological prowess and impactful solutions to organisations worldwide,” said a blog post authored by Databricks’ VP of business development and partner, Roger Murff, and VP of global system integrators, Sabina Shaikh.

In the consulting and system integrator global awards, technology and design consultancy and Elite Databricks partner Mantel Group won Asia Pacific and Japan (APJ) Emerging Business Partner of the Year for “driving exceptional customer growth, joint engagements, and technical expertise in the [APJ] emerging enterprise segment.”

In response to the accolade, Mantel Group said it has undertaken more than 30 Databricks Data Intelligence Platform implementations at scale in Australia and New Zealand.

“This award shows the trust and confidence Databricks has in Mantel Group to enable businesses, not only to implement data foundations such as data governance and data platforms, but also make their businesses more efficient through the application of AI,” said  Emma Bromet, Mantel Group data partner.

“We are excited that this award will enable even more opportunities to work with businesses across the APJ region to innovate on Databricks.”

Additionally, Atlassian won the Built on Partner of the Year award for building an app on Delta Lake and Unity Catalog with native support for Delta sharing, which Databricks claims can help customers “seemingly share data with the Atlassian data lake”.