Home / Capabilities / API & Integration Engineering

The enterprise is its integrations.

What an enterprise can actually do is bounded by what its systems can say to each other. Point-to-point integration turns that into an unmaintainable web. We make integration a product, not plumbing.

R·I·S
The problem / the outcome

Where this moves the number.

The problem

Integration as an unmaintainable web.

Every new connection is another bespoke point-to-point link. Nobody owns the whole graph. A change anywhere risks breakage everywhere, and the cost of every future initiative quietly compounds.

The outcome

A composable, governed integration layer.

API-first, contract-governed integration treated as a managed product with a developer portal — so partners and internal teams build on a stable surface, not a fragile mesh.

The stack

What we actually build with.

Not a logo wall. The components we engineer and the discipline around them.

API gatewaysEvent mesh / streamingAPI contracts & versioningDeveloper portalsIntegration patterns (EIP)iPaaS where it fitsSchema governancePartner / open ecosystems
USE
Enterprise use cases

Where this earns its budget.

ECOSYSTEM

Open / partner platforms

A governed API surface partners can build on without breaking you.

COMPOSABILITY

Composable architecture

Capabilities exposed as products, recombined instead of rebuilt.

EVENTS

Event-driven backbone

An event mesh that decouples systems and makes real-time possible.

MODERNISATION

Legacy integration fabric

Wrapping legacy cores in stable contracts so new work isn't hostage to old systems.

Where this sits in PRISM

This capability is anchored in specific stages.

Integration architecture is decided in Roadmap and hardened through Scale — it is the connective tissue every other capability depends on.

PProof
RRoadmap
IImplement
SScale
MMeasure

Have an initiative that needs to ship?

Start with Proof. We’ll model the commercial case before proposing a build — and tell you honestly if the number isn’t there.

Model my ROI
Stage P is a conversation, not a contract.