Prodapt Announces Agentic Solutions for Autonomous Operations Powered by NVIDIA AI Platform
Article content
Working with human experts, AI Agents simplify & automate operations, elevate experiences
Article content
CHENNAI, India — Prodapt, a Gartner-recognized Telecom-Native services and AI integration leader, today announced a new Agentic AI based solution to drive autonomous operations for Telcos, in collaboration with NVIDIA.
Article content
The solution leverages the NVIDIA AI platform to build and deploy Telco-trained AI Agents that predict, analyze, reason, and simulate to resolve incidents impacting service quality and customer experience.
Article content
Telcos want to deliver better experiences and cut costs and AI Agents help by accelerating the next transformational leap from traditional BSS/OSS systems. This requires agile AI infrastructure, cutting-edge GenAI platforms, and AI integration skills, to enable scalability as the industry evolves beyond experimentation.
As part of its Practical AI strategy, Prodapt has built a range of AI Agents across the Telecom value chain, which are powered by NVIDIA NIM™ and NVIDIA NeMo™ microservices. These agents go beyond simple actions, solving multi-step problem statements to improve operational efficiency, customer experience, revenue monetization, enterprise modernization, and accelerate the deployment of critical applications.
Article content
Autonomous Operations (AO)
Article content
The first Autonomous Agent is focused on Network operations:
Article content
The Telecom network issue resolution workflow is complex – impaired by a legacy stack and inability to forecast issues or ascertain available field resources in last-mile service delivery. Prodapt's solution inserts AI Agents across this workflow, deploying them for predictive analytics, issuing proactive alerts, finding the right Network Engineer and dispatching jobs, creating issue summaries, enabling guided resolution plans, and closing the loop after resolution. Simulations suggest the solution will enable Telcos to achieve a 30% improvement in resolution cycle time and drive better resource utilization.
Article content
'Prodapt's AO solution developed with NVIDIA AI Enterprise is compelling for two reasons: it combines AI agents and human expertise in the most ingenious way possible, and secondly, it future-proofs Telco networks, going from reactive to proactive operations by mainstreaming Agentic AI into the full lifecycle,' said Chris Penrose, Global Head of Business Development, Telecoms, at NVIDIA.
Article content
'AI integration is turning out to be the Number One priority for the Autonomous Operations vision. With a variety of ready to use AI Agents and infrastructure providers crowding a contested market, Telcos need a guiding hand to help them provision and operate the right solutions, operated by handpicked global AI talent. Prodapt delivers what is necessary to turn PoCs into impactful solutions through our Practical AI vision with NVIDIA,' Rajiv Papneja, CTO, Prodapt.
Article content
About Prodapt
Article content
Prodapt is the largest specialized player in the Connectedness industry. As an AI-first strategic technology partner, Prodapt provides consulting, business reengineering, and managed services for the largest telecom and tech enterprises building networks and digital experiences of tomorrow. A ServiceNow-invested company, Prodapt has been recognized by Gartner as a Large, Telecom-Native, Regional IT Service Provider.
Article content
Connecting 1.1 billion people and 5.4 billion devices across the globe, Prodapt's clients include Google, Amazon, PayPal, SoftBank, ServiceNow, Ciena, Verizon, Vodafone, Liberty Global, Liberty Latin America, Claro, Lumen, Windstream, Rogers, Telus, KPN, Virgin Media, British Telecom, Deutsche Telekom, Adtran, Samsung, and many more.
Article content
A 'Great Place To Work ® Certified™' company, Prodapt employs over 6,000 technology and domain experts across the Americas, Europe, India, Africa, & Japan. Prodapt is part of the 130-year-old business conglomerate The Jhaver Group, which employs over 32,000 people across 80+ locations globally.
Article content
Article content
Article content
Article content
Article content
Article content

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
43 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Canadians give themselves a C grade in AI skills, TD survey shows
A new survey from Toronto-Dominion Bank shows Canadians may be more adept with AI than they believe, with lower levels of trust and familiarity potentially holding them back. The survey found 87 per cent of Canadians indicated they were comfortable utilizing, learning and adapting to new technologies. However, the results highlighted a gap between confidence and proficiency in using AI, with only three per cent of respondents giving themselves an A grade, while 40 per cent awarded themselves a C grade. Christine Morris, a senior executive vice-president at TD, says in a release that the survey suggests that although Canadians seem to be comfortable adapting to AI, the technology may feel unfamiliar. The survey also found trust in AI was relatively low, with 43 per cent finding it to be a source of accurate information. The survey was completed by Ipsos on behalf of TD in March, with responses from 2,500 individuals and a margin of error of 2.2 percentage points, 19 times out of 20, had all Canadian adults been polled. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 17, 2025. Companies in this story: (TSX:TD)


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Fintech Ramp valued at US$16 billion in late-stage funding round
A man holds a phone and a banking card in this undated stock image. (Mikhail Nilov/ Ramp was valued at US$16 billion in its latest funding round, the financial technology startup said on Tuesday, signaling renewed investor interest in financial platforms that offer digital and artificial intelligence-based services. The startup, which offers corporate cards, payment services and expense management applications, secured US$200 million in its series E round led by Founders Fund. The round also saw participation from other high-profile venture capital firms such as Thrive Capital, D1 Capital Partners, General Catalyst and GIC. After a years-long funding slump, fintech startups are attracting fresh interest from investors, buoyed by signs of stabilizing valuations, clearer regulatory signals and renewed demand for digital financial services. From payments to lending and crypto infrastructure, firms across the fintech sector are seeing a revival in venture funding rounds and strategic backers. But VC firms are cautious, limiting backing to select high-growth companies with clearer paths to scale and profitability. Ramp has also woven artificial intelligence into its services. The technology has emerged as a standout theme in Wall Street's tech investing this year. Founded in 2019, Ramp enables tens of billions in purchases annually and serves over 40,000 customers, from family farms to space startups, according to the company. Its customers include e-commerce platform Shopify, commercial real estate services and investment firm CBRE and defense technology company Anduril. Ramp says its products help businesses eliminate repetitive administrative tasks and operate more efficiently. The latest round brings Ramp's total equity financing to US$1.4 billion. Other investors in the latest fundraise included ICONIQ Growth, Khosla Ventures, Sands Capital, 8VC, and Lux Capital, among others. Global startup funding rose 17 per cent in the first quarter of 2025 from the previous quarter, and was up 54 per cent from a year earlier, according to data from Crunchbase. --- Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar and Leroy Leo


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Data analytics startup Coralogix doubles valuation to over US$1 billion in latest funding round
In this stock photo, a person is seen typing on a computer keyboard. (Pexels) Data analytics platform Coralogix nearly doubled its valuation to over US$1 billion in its latest funding round, co-founder and CEO Ariel Assaraf told Reuters in an interview, as artificial intelligence-driven enterprise offerings continue to pique investor delight. Coralogix raised US$115 million in a round led by California-based venture growth firm NewView Capital, the startup said on Tuesday. Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) and venture firm NextEquity also participated in the round. The fundraise comes three years after Coralogix's previous external funding in 2022, where it raised US$142 million. Valuations have faced downward pressure since then, as investors continue to sit on dry powder amid elevated interest rates and geopolitical tensions. Enterprise software-as-a-service startups, however, have endured a wider slowdown in venture capital funding, with an AI gold-rush pushing SaaS financing to record US$58 billion in the first quarter, according to PitchBook. Coralogix's revenue increased seven times since 2022, Assaraf told Reuters. The company, however, is yet to be profitable, with nearly 75 per cent of its revenue in 2024 going towards research and development, according to Assaraf. 'Successful companies in our space always invest a large portion of their revenue in R&D and were very late to become profitable,' Assaraf added, noting a similar pathway across peers Datadog and Splunk. Startups are integrating AI-driven agents across IT development and operations as enterprises increasingly ask for all-in-one platforms to oversee their entire cloud infrastructure and processes. Coralogix expanded into AI observability with the acquisition of Aporia in December 2024. The company is aggressively looking to expand its AI talent pool, Assaraf said. 'If there's a strategic acquisition of a company with a specific, very talented pool of people around AI, we will make those acquisitions, even if they're not small,' he told Reuters. On Tuesday, Coralogix also unveiled its new AI agent 'olly,' aiming to simplify data monitoring via a conversational platform. Industry leaders have hailed AI-based agents as a transformative use case of the technology. --- Reporting by Arasu Kannagi Basil and Ateev Bhandari in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona.