DryvIQ unveils Nasuni connector for unified governance
DryvIQ has launched a new connector for Nasuni, expanding the partnership and integrating their platforms for unstructured data and content lifecycle management.
The connector links the DryvIQ platform with Nasuni's file data platform, giving organisations a broader view of enterprise content stored in Nasuni and other unstructured data systems.
Organisations often hold large volumes of information across collaboration tools, storage estates, and line-of-business applications. The connector is positioned as a way to view and manage that content through a single interface, and includes migration functions for moving content into Nasuni.
Governance focus
Unstructured data governance is drawing more attention as firms reassess risk exposure and information management. Many are also preparing data for AI projects, which can require a clearer understanding of where data sits, what it contains, and who can access it.
DryvIQ says the connector provides insight and classification across Nasuni file data and other repositories. Customers can apply lifecycle controls and governance policies across multiple systems, helping reduce inconsistency when retention and compliance rules differ between platforms.
The connector also enables customers to manage Nasuni file data alongside other enterprise content through a unified view, including policy automation and lifecycle governance across repositories.
Sean Nathaniel, President and CEO of DryvIQ, said the announcement reflects the need for better visibility across content estates.
"Enterprises don't struggle with a lack of content; they struggle with a lack of clarity," said Sean Nathaniel. "With this new connector, customers can gain visibility into their Nasuni content alongside the content in all their enterprise repositories. That insight enables better governance, improved compliance, faster decisions, and more confident AI execution."
Platform details
Nasuni sells a cloud-based file data platform built on its UniFS global file system. The company says the platform provides cloud file storage and global access, and highlights ransomware protection and operational resilience.
DryvIQ says its platform adds discovery, classification, migration tools, and policy controls, and supports Nasuni and more than 40 other repositories across cloud and on-premises environments.
The companies positioned the connector as a response to enterprise demand for coordinated governance and modernisation workflows across complex environments, including multiple business units and geographies, and a mix of legacy and newer collaboration systems.
Michael Sotnick, SVP of Business and Corporate Development at Nasuni, said AI adoption is accelerating decisions around content and data management.
"AI is forcing enterprises to move faster than ever, yet many still make decisions with only a partial view of their content," said Sotnick. "DryvIQ adds intelligence and context that complements Nasuni's platform, giving customers enterprise-wide visibility and the ability to enforce policies with confidence. Together, we help organisations simplify complex decisions and operate at a global scale."
Availability
The Nasuni connector is available within the DryvIQ platform. It can be used for migration into Nasuni and for ongoing management and governance across Nasuni and other connected systems.
DryvIQ says it is used by more than 1,100 organisations. Nasuni says it operates in more than 70 countries and reports a 98% customer satisfaction rating.
The launch underscores growing competition among vendors to become a control layer for unstructured data, and reflects increased focus on policy enforcement, classification, and visibility as firms map data for AI use cases and tighter compliance requirements.
Both companies said the connector is part of a broader push for enterprise-wide content insight and coordinated governance across multiple repositories.