AI
AI
AI
Business process automation software company Appian Inc. is stepping up its game in agentic artificial intelligence, announcing major updates to its platform focused on AI-assisted application development and Model Context Protocol integration.
The company announced the updates at its annual user conference Appian World 2026, where it explained how anchoring AI within processes can eliminate the problems of fragmented data, reliability and control, which continue to hold back the deployment of AI agents.
Appian offers a business process automation platform that can visualize how an organization’s employees perform routine tasks, such as processing documents. It displays the steps involved in a task, the amount of time each step takes and related metrics. Companies can analyze that information to identify areas for improvement.
The platform makes it possible to automate labor-intensive aspects of employees’ work using AI agents. Those agents can extract key details from documents, summarize the information and perform related tasks. Appian says its AI processes documents with accuracy of over 95%, which it says is about 35% better than legacy alternatives.
With today’s updates, Appian says, it’s providing its AI agents with more structure, context and guardrails, making them even smarter, more reliable and increasingly effective. The biggest change is the adoption of MCP, which enables its agents to securely interface with external enterprise systems. At the same time, the integration means third-party agents will be able to access Appian’s platform, including tools such as its Data Fabric offering, which provides read-write access to enterprise process data.
These integrations will enable AI agents to better coordinate work and do that work much smarter than before, the company said. At the same time, it’s advancing agent learning by giving users the tools to track an agent’s performance and then apply its memory across processes to enhance its decision making. “Users will soon be able to expand on this by giving AI guidance on what objectives to optimize against and recommend improvements that can be applied safely,” the company said.
The Data Fabric tool is being enhanced through a technology partnership with the cloud data warehouse company Snowflake Inc. The company explained that it’s getting a “unified metadata model” that will provide AI agents with more context about how data is structured and connected across external tools. With this update, Appian said, it’s effectively becoming the AI orchestration layer for Snowflake’s AI Data Cloud, combining data aggregation with model training and process orchestration. The MCP-enabled integration will provide agents with greater enterprise context to support autonomous, data-backed decision making.
Snowflake Vice President of AI Baris Gultekin said enterprises are bored of AI experiments, and want to start seeing results and increased productivity from their investments. “By combining Appian’s process orchestration and data fabric with the Snowflake AI Data Cloud, we’re bringing intelligence directly into the flow of work,” he said. “Together, we enable secure, enterprise-grade AI where agents can access trusted data through Cortex AI, act with context, and drive measurable impact across the business.”
On the application development side, Appian said it’s providing more structure to enhance AI coding and prevent problems with technical debt and compliance issues.
The company said it’s enabling “AI-assisted spec-driven development,” where AI extracts rich specifications from legacy applications in order to create a clear visual plan for modernizing those apps. Users will be able to visualize the user interface, the data models and the process flows, and then quickly iterate on the app’s design.
Human-supervised AI developer agents will then build the apps based on the user’s specifications. Once again, MCP is playing a role here, for it allows organizations to use third-party coding tools such as Anthropic PBC’s Claude Code or Amazon Web Services Inc.’s Kiro to build the actual apps inside Appian’s platform.
Chief Technology Officer Mike Beckley said the combination of the new Appian Composer, AI agents and Appian MCP server supports trusted agentic process orchestration and app modernization. “Beneath the covers, Appian Composer is built on Appian’s new open MCP, a model-driven representation of your complete application estate — requirements, apps, data entities, logic, workflows, security/governance rules, integrations and multi-object dependencies — now exposed as context for developers and agents to safely evolve and optimize,” he said.
Scott Hebner, principal analyst at SiliconANGLE sister research firm theCUBE Research, said the single most important word in enterprise AI is “trust.” Enterprises, he said, need AI that’s deeply embedded into governed processes so that security, auditability and predictable execution are baked in from the start, and that’s what Appian is trying to deliver.
“Appian World is highlighting an important market shift: Enterprises are moving beyond experimenting with AI in isolation and toward operationalizing AI inside real business processes,” he added. “The real differentiator is no longer just having agents, but orchestrating trusted experiences where data, controls and workflows are required to deliver business value at scale.”
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