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ManageMy adds Snowflake integration for carrier data access

ManageMy tied its carrier front end to Snowflake, promising self-service access across policy, billing, claims and distribution instead of waiting on IT extracts.

Sam Ortega··2 min read
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ManageMy adds Snowflake integration for carrier data access
Source: managemy.com

ManageMy pushed its carrier platform closer to the operating table, not just the data warehouse. On May 14, 2026, the Charlotte, North Carolina-based software company said it had added Snowflake integration for current clients, giving insurers direct self-service reporting and data access across policy, billing, claims and distribution.

That matters because most carriers already have plenty of systems. What they often lack is a clean path from raw data to daily decisions. ManageMy said the connection lets users query and consume data without waiting for bespoke extracts or manual report builds, with near-real-time dashboards for policy, claims and performance. In practice, that is the difference between spotting a claims backlog in the morning and waiting days for an IT pull to confirm it.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The integration also moved beyond simple connectivity. ManageMy said data can be routed into a carrier’s own Snowflake environment, SQL databases or BI tools including Tableau, Looker, Power BI and Qlik. It also included role-based security and data masking, a detail that matters in insurance because underwriting, claims, finance and executive reporting all touch sensitive records that cannot be left floating around a free-for-all dashboard layer.

ManageMy chief data officer Sean Rowley was part of the announcement, and the company’s framing was clear: insurers already have the data, but they do not always have a straightforward way to access it or connect it to the rest of the business. That is why this release reads less like a plumbing update and more like an attempt to become the front door to carrier decision-making.

The timing fits ManageMy’s own growth story as well. The company moved into a larger Charlotte office in December 2025, signaling momentum as it expands around insurance and financial-services customers. The Snowflake tie-in suggests ManageMy wants to be judged not by how much data it moves, but by whether it helps carriers govern it, surface it and use it faster.

Snowflake is leaning on the same argument from the other side of the stack. The company says insurers use its AI Data Cloud for regulatory reporting such as IFRS 17, and for unifying underwriting and claims data. It points to Aviva, which it says migrated 1.3 petabytes of data in seven months and now processes data eight times faster, and to Open Insurance in Australia, which says it reached 70% data self-service and cut BI dashboard delivery time in half. Taken together, those examples show the real prize: not another integration, but a carrier data layer that actually changes how work gets done.

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