Nasuni Scales Hyderabad R&D to Strengthen its Enterprise File Data Platform for Teams and AI

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Nasuni, the enterprise file data foundation for teams and the AI that supports them, today announced the expansion of its Hyderabad Research & Development Center to accelerate innovation across unified file data management, protection, and activation.

The Hyderabad Center was formally inaugurated by Shri Sanjay Kumar, IAS, Special Chief Secretary, Information Technology, Electronics & Communications and Industries & Commerce, Government of Telangana, in the presence of Sam King, Chief Executive Officer of Nasuni. The inauguration highlights Telangana’s continued emergence as a leading technology and innovation hub and reinforces Nasuni’s long-term commitment to expanding advanced engineering and AI-focused capabilities in India.

Working in close coordination with teams in the United States and Ireland, the expansion of the Hyderabad Center contributes directly to advancing Nasuni’s platform evolution, file data indexing and AI integration, and resilient infrastructure design. This integration strengthens Nasuni’s ability to deliver scalable, secure, and well-governed file data services that support enterprise modernization initiatives worldwide. The Hyderabad Center is established in partnership with Summit Consulting and ANSR, recognized leaders in building and scaling Global Capability Centers (GCCs). The collaboration brings structured capability design, talent strategy, and operational scaling expertise to Nasuni’s Hyderabad expansion.

“Hyderabad has steadily evolved into a location where global companies anchor core product engineering, not peripheral support functions,” said Shri Sanjay Kumar, IAS, Special Chief Secretary, Information Technology, Electronics & Communications and Industries & Commerce, Government of Telangana, “Nasuni’s decision to deepen its R&D presence here reflects confidence in the state’s ability to support advanced data infrastructure and enterprise technology development.”

Across industries, critical operational data lives in files, engineering drawings, CAD models, financial documents, media assets, compliance records, and project documentation. As enterprises deploy AI agents to retrieve, analyze, and generate file content, interaction with production file systems is accelerating. But AI requires more than raw access. It depends on unified, permission-aware, context-rich file data.

“Enterprise AI is not limited by models. It is limited by file data readiness,” said Sam King, Chief Executive Officer of Nasuni. “Organizations cannot scale AI on fragmented file infrastructure. Our expansion in Hyderabad strengthens the engineering backbone behind our unified file data platform and accelerates our ability to deliver secure, resilient, and analytics-ready file data services to enterprises worldwide.”