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Mindsprint partners with monday.com to automate AI-led enterprise operations

Mindsprint’s new monday.com tie-up gives Wipro a faster path into enterprise workflow deals, just after buying Mindsprint for $375 million.

Marcus Chen2 min read
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Mindsprint partners with monday.com to automate AI-led enterprise operations
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A Wipro-owned services arm is now selling monday.com as more than a work tracker. Mindsprint said the partnership is meant to power “integrated digital operations,” tying monday.com’s workflow platform to enterprise services across IT service management, customer relationship management and work management just days after Olam Group agreed to sell Mindsprint to Wipro for $375 million.

That timing matters for monday.com’s enterprise push. Olam also gave Wipro an eight-year strategic transformation contract with committed annual spend of $100 million, a figure it said would account for about 55% to 60% of its technology and shared services budget. In that context, the monday.com deal looks like part of a broader Wipro-led effort to package software, consulting and implementation into one enterprise sale rather than a standalone SaaS subscription.

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For monday.com teams, the real story is channel leverage. Mindsprint says it has more than 3,200 professionals across the United States, United Kingdom, Middle East, India, Australia and Africa, with domain expertise in food and agribusiness, retail, manufacturing, healthcare and life sciences. It also says its Intelligent Enterprise Operations work centers on Agentic AI in finance operations, taxation, supply chain, procurement, manufacturing, risk and compliance, and human resources. That gives monday.com a partner that can take its platform into higher-stakes operational workflows where buyers want proof of deployment speed, control and measurable outcomes.

The company has been building for that market. monday.com said in February that its platform had more than 250,000 customers worldwide and more than 5,000 partners, with a marketplace built around setup, workflow design, optimization, process building, data migration, integrations and team training. In February 2025, it hosted a Partner Summit in London with more than 600 professionals from more than 50 countries, underscoring how central the ecosystem has become to distribution.

The product side is moving just as quickly. In March, monday.com said external AI agents can now access the platform and operate alongside human users. It also launched Agentalent.ai, a managed marketplace where enterprises can discover, evaluate and hire AI agents for defined business roles, with backing from AWS, Anthropic and Wix. That gives partners like Mindsprint a new pitch: monday.com is not only for project tracking, but for orchestrating AI-led operations across departments.

The enterprise signal is already showing up in the numbers. monday.com reported fourth-quarter 2025 revenue of $333.9 million, up 25% year over year, and full-year revenue growth of 27% with a 14% non-GAAP operating margin. Customers with more than $50,000 in annual recurring revenue made up 41% of total ARR, and monday vibe became the fastest product in company history to pass $1 million in ARR. For sales, product and engineering teams inside monday.com, the Mindsprint partnership points in one direction: larger accounts, more implementation complexity and a harder comparison with rivals such as Asana, Jira and ServiceNow.

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