Atturra has been honoured with the APJ Partner of the Year Award from Boomi at the automation and connectivity vendor's global 2024 Partner Summit.
This is the fifth year Atturra has won the APJ Partner of the Year Award, following success in 2018, 2020, 2021 and 2023.
The company said its data and integration business has delivered over 1,000 projects using Boomi's platform involving middleware modernisation, enterprise data connectivity and optimisation, AI readiness and intelligent automation.
A Boomi partner since 2016, Atturra has over 130 Boomi-certified staff with operations across Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Singapore.
“At Atturra, we chase successful go-lives and client wins. We aim to make our stakeholders more successful by solving their data and connectivity challenges. This award – fourth in last five years – demonstrates our capability and commitment in the region,” said Jason Frost, executive GM at Atturra data and integration.
“We are more than a Boomi partner – we are a technology consulting powerhouse that understands the complete enterprise data journey, their reference architecture and delivers fit for purpose solutions. Our combined strength in ANZ gives us access to a large array of clients to pitch our automation and data story. Ultimately, we endeavour to create ‘moments that matter with data’.”
Attura received the award at the 2024 Boomi Partner Summit in Denver, Colorado on 7 May 2024, which brought together Boomi partners from across the globe.
“Our global partners bring a wealth of expertise, capabilities, resources, and cutting-edge technologies to support the diverse needs of our more than 20,000 customers worldwide,” said Dan McAllister, Senior VP of global alliances and channels at Boomi.
“Serving as trusted advisors, strategic consultants, industry leaders, and innovators in IT and digital transformation, our partners tirelessly address challenges and drive the seamless implementation of Boomi’s solutions every day. We are privileged to acknowledge their remarkable contributions over the past year."