Intelligent, governed execution of integration processes
Agentic AI extends the SEEBURGER BIS Platform with governed, agent-based automation for integration processes. AI agents can propose, execute and optimize tasks such as routing, transformation and orchestration while operating within clearly defined policies, approval workflows and enterprise guardrails.
With built-in governance, transparency and human-in-the-loop oversight, teams can accelerate complex integration work, reduce manual effort and rely on intelligent automation that remains secure, traceable and compliant.
“Agentic Data & Decision Platforms emerge where the model is the lakehouse, and agents are the application surface for analytics, operations, and governance.”
IDC, Tech Sector Transformation Series: The Agentic Evolution of Enterprise AI and Data Platforms, 2025, #US53884625, November 2025
Your benefits with Agentic AI
How Agentic AI supports integration workflows
Agentic AI supports integration teams across complex workflows by executing tasks within clearly defined governance rules. AI agents can assist with routing, transformation, orchestration, validation and optimization while keeping processes transparent and controlled.
- Routing and orchestration: AI agents help coordinate data flows across systems, applications and partners.
- Transformation and mapping: Agents support the execution and optimization of transformation logic.
- Validation and compliance checks: Built-in rules help ensure that processes follow defined enterprise standards.
- Event-driven processes: Agents can react to defined triggers and support dynamic workflow execution.
From automation to governed autonomy
Traditional automation follows predefined rules. Agentic AI goes one step further by enabling AI agents to act on integration tasks within defined boundaries. This helps organizations move from static automation to adaptive, governed execution without compromising control.
Ready to bring governed autonomy into your integration workflows?
Explore our case studies, white papers and blog articles for in-depth insights and practical solutions.
It would appear that songbirds are able to predict storms some time before they hit. In 2013 and 2014, American environmental researchers spent time recording the flight paths of golden-winged warblers. When a large storm front moved across eastern Tennessee in April 2014, the researchers observed that the birds breeding there fled the area.…