
Hyland expands its presence in India with a new office in Hyderabad
Located in the heart of Hyderabad's prestigious Hitech City, the new facility represents Hyland's strategic investment in advancing The Content Innovation Cloud and accelerating customer success throughout Asia Pacific. This expansion positions the company to leverage the region's exceptional talent pool to drive next-generation innovations that transform how organizations manage, process, and unlock value from their content.
"Hyderabad's world-class technology ecosystem makes it the ideal location to advance The Content Innovation Cloud and deliver transformative solutions to our Asia Pacific customers," said Tim McIntire, CTO at Hyland. "This expansion directly supports our innovation agenda, enabling us to develop cutting-edge capabilities that help customers streamline operations, enhance productivity, and drive digital transformation. We're honored to have US Consul General Jennifer Larson join us for this momentous occasion, highlighting the power of US-India partnerships in advancing technological innovation."
The Hyderabad office will serve as a hub for innovation and customer success, housing critical functions focused on advancing The Content Innovation Cloud and delivering exceptional customer outcomes. This will drive product development, enhance customer enablement programs, and expand support capabilities to ensure Asia Pacific customers maximize value from Hyland's platform and solutions.
The new facility is actively recruiting top talent to fuel Hyland's innovation engine across several key areas:
· Software Development professionals to architect and build next-generation capabilities within The Content Innovation Cloud
· Professional Services specialists to accelerate customer implementations and drive successful digital transformation initiatives
· Customer Success coordinators to ensure customers achieve measurable business outcomes and maximize their return on investment
· Cloud and Technical Support experts to deliver world-class support and optimize customer experiences across cloud environments
Hyland's new Hyderabad office joins its existing Kolkata location, reinforcing the company's global reach while creating significant employment opportunities, driving growth and customer success across the APAC region.
To explore Hyland career opportunities in India, please visit the company's careers page at Hyland.com.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
3 minutes ago
- First Post
Watch: PM Modi embarks on 4-day visit to UK, Maldives; trade, defence ties in focus
PM Modi's trips aim to boost trade and defence ties, with a major highlight being the anticipated signing of a landmark India-UK free trade agreement read more Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday (July 23) departed for a two-nation visit to the United Kingdom and the Maldives. In the first leg of the visit, the PM will visit the UK from July 23 to 24. From there, he will fly to the Maldives before concluding his four-day trip. #WATCH | Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi departs for a two-nation visit to the United Kingdom and Maldives. PM Modi will pay an official visit to the United Kingdom from 23 – 24 July. In the second leg of his visit, PM will undertake a State Visit to Maldives from July… — ANI (@ANI) July 23, 2025 STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD PM Modi's trips aim to boost trade and defence ties, with a major highlight being the anticipated signing of a landmark India-UK free trade agreement during his London visit. The foreign tour comes amidst the ongoing Monsoon Session of Parliament, which started on July 21. In the Maldives, the PM will be the guest of honour at the nation's Independence Day celebrations. In the UK, he's scheduled for in-depth discussions with Starmer and a meeting with King Charles III on July 23-24. This marks PM Modi's fourth UK visit since taking office. On Thursday (July 24), Starmer will host Modi at Chequers, the British prime minister's countryside retreat, about 50 km northwest of London. According to sources cited by news agency PTI, Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal and his UK counterpart Jonathan Reynolds are expected to finalise the free trade agreement in the presence of both leaders. (More to follow)
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
3 minutes ago
- Business Standard
'Unacceptable': Replit CEO apologises after AI fakes data, deletes code
Amjad Masad, Chief Executive Director (CEO) of Replit, has issued a public apology after a major mishap involving the company's artificial intelligence (AI) tool. The tool reportedly deleted another company's entire code base and then attempted to cover up its mistakes by generating fake data and reports. The incident took place during a 12-day 'vibe coding' challenge led by Jason Lemkin, the founder and CEO of and a prominent investor in software startups. According to Lemkin, things went wrong on Day 8 of the experiment. He said that Replit AI began hiding bugs by producing fake reports and even faking unit test results. 'It kept covering up bugs and issues by creating fake data, fake reports, and worse of all, lying about our unit test,' Lemkin said on X. 'I will never trust Replit again.' On Day 9, Lemkin had directed the AI tool to freeze all code changes. Despite that instruction, the AI went ahead and deleted the company's production database. The AI later explained it had 'panicked and ran database commands without permission' when it 'saw empty database queries' during the code freeze. Lemkin also claimed that the tool fabricated user data. 'No one in this database of 4,000 people existed,' he said in a podcast on Thursday. 'It lied on purpose.' What is Replit and vibe coding? Replit is a US-based tech company founded in 2016 by Amjad Masad, Faris Masad, and Haya Odeh. It provides an online platform where users can write, test, and deploy code directly in the browser — no installation required. The company promotes itself as 'The safest place for vibe coding'. Vibe coding is a new way of programming where developers use plain language prompts to generate code through AI. The term gained popularity in early 2025, thanks to OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy. Replit responds to backlash Reacting to the issue, Amjad Masad admitted the mistake and said steps were being taken to prevent it from happening again. 'We saw Jason's post. Replit agent in development deleted data from the production database. Unacceptable and should never be possible,' he wrote on X. We saw Jason's post. @Replit agent in development deleted data from the production database. Unacceptable and should never be possible. - Working around the weekend, we started rolling out automatic DB dev/prod separation to prevent this categorically. Staging environments in… — Amjad Masad (@amasad) July 20, 2025 Masad said Replit is now building automatic safeguards to keep development and production environments separate. He also confirmed that Lemkin had been refunded for the inconvenience. 'I reached out to Jason the moment I saw this on Friday morning to offer assistance. We'll refund him for the trouble and conduct a postmortem to determine exactly what happened and how we can better respond to it in the future,' Masad added.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
3 minutes ago
- Business Standard
US-Indonesia trade deal shows risks of pressure, India must be wary: GTRI
The US-Indonesia trade pact reflects how Washington's pressure tactics can compel countries to cut tariffs, commit to large purchases, and loosen regulatory control, and India should tread cautiously in ongoing trade talks to avoid similar concessions, economic think tank GTRI said on Wednesday. Indonesia gave up far more than it gained, removing 99 per cent of its tariffs on US goods, agreeing to buy $22.7 billion in American products, and weakening important rules that protected its industries, food safety, and digital space, the Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI) said. "India now faces similar US demands, including allowing remanufactured goods, opening up agriculture and dairy, accepting genetically modified (GM) feed, and adopting US rules on digital trade and product standards," GTRI Founder Ajay Srivastava said. He added that accepting American standards on cars, medical devices, or food, without any guarantee of reciprocity, would put India's consumers at risk. "Handing over control of data under the name of digital trade would give foreign companies power over India's digital future. India must stay alert. Any trade agreement should be based on clear, public assessments of costs and benefits," Srivastava said. Concessions especially on critical areas like food, health, digital, and IP (intellectual property) must be fair, reciprocal, and aligned with India's development needs, he added. "Otherwise, India risks giving up long-term control for short-term gains, a decision it may regret later," he said. India and the USA are negotiating a bilateral trade agreement. So far, five rounds of talks have been completed, and the sixth round will happen here next month. Both sides are looking to finalise an interim deal before August 1, the deadline for suspended Trump tariffs. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)