GTC 2026: Companies With Synergy for WorkingAgents — A Partnership Map

By James Aspinwall, co-written by Alfred Pennyworth (my trusted AI) — March 7, 2026, 06:49


NVIDIA GTC 2026 runs March 16–19 in San Jose with 990 exhibitors and 30,000 attendees. This is the densest concentration of AI decision-makers on the planet in a single week. For WorkingAgents — an AI orchestration platform built on Elixir with MCP tools, A2A protocol, persistent scheduling, and per-user access control — the expo hall is a target-rich environment.

Below is every confirmed GTC exhibitor or participant with meaningful synergy for WorkingAgents, ranked by partnership potential. The ranking weighs three factors: how directly their technology or market position complements ours, the size of the business opportunity, and the likelihood of a productive first conversation at a booth.


Tier 1 — AI Agent Frameworks and LLM Providers

These companies are building the tools and models that WorkingAgents orchestrates. Partnership here means integration, co-marketing, or becoming a featured orchestration backend.

1. LangChain

CEO Harrison Chase is a keynote speaker. LangChain is the dominant agent framework (LangGraph, LangSmith). WorkingAgents fills a gap LangChain does not — persistent scheduling, alarm-based task chains, crash-recoverable state on the BEAM. A “LangChain + WorkingAgents” integration story writes itself: LangChain handles agent reasoning, WorkingAgents handles operational orchestration (schedule this, retry that, escalate if no response by Friday). Harrison Chase is literally on stage — this is the conversation to have.

2. Perplexity

CEO Aravind Srinivas is a keynote speaker. Already integrated in WorkingAgents. Perplexity is already one of our LLM providers (sonar-pro, sonar-reasoning). A deeper partnership — featured integration, case study, or API partnership tier — is a natural next step. Their CEO is speaking. Show up with a working demo.

3. Mistral AI

CEO Arthur Mensch is a keynote speaker. European LLM provider. Critical for GDPR-conscious European clients. WorkingAgents already supports multi-provider switching — adding Mistral positions us as the orchestrator that speaks every model. Mistral is also pushing enterprise deployment, where our access control and per-user isolation become selling points.

4. Cohere

Confirmed participant. Enterprise-focused LLM provider with strong RAG capabilities. Cohere’s positioning (enterprise search, retrieval, generation) maps directly to WorkingAgents’ tool orchestration. Their embed and rerank APIs could enhance our NIS (CRM) search and document retrieval tools.

5. Together AI

Confirmed participant. Open-source model inference platform. Cost-effective alternative to closed APIs. Adding Together AI as a provider gives WorkingAgents clients a self-hosted or lower-cost LLM option. Their inference API is OpenAI-compatible, making integration straightforward.

6. Decagon

Confirmed participant. Enterprise AI agent platform for customer support. They are building exactly the kind of vertical agent application that needs orchestration infrastructure underneath. WorkingAgents’ scheduling, task management, and multi-user isolation could be their operational backbone.

7. CodeRabbit

Confirmed participant. AI-powered code review. WorkingAgents’ alarm and scheduling system could automate recurring code review workflows — “review all PRs from the last 24 hours every morning at 9am” is a natural use case for our task scheduling.

8. Cursor

Confirmed participant. AI code editor with massive developer adoption. Cursor uses MCP for tool integration. WorkingAgents is an MCP server. Direct compatibility — Cursor developers could connect to WorkingAgents for persistent task management, CRM access, and scheduled operations directly from their editor.


Tier 2 — Cloud Providers and Infrastructure

These companies host AI workloads. Partnership here means marketplace listings, reference architectures, or managed deployment options.

9. AWS — Booth #921

Diamond sponsor. Showcasing agentic AI, AI factories, frontier models. The largest cloud provider. AWS Bedrock already provides multi-model access. WorkingAgents on AWS — deployed as an ECS/Fargate service with RDS-backed SQLite or Aurora — is the enterprise deployment story. AWS’s booth demos include “industry-specific agentic AI” which is precisely our market. Partners demoing at the AWS booth include Snowflake, Cognizant, Zilliz, and Capgemini — all worth conversations.

10. Microsoft Azure — Booth #521

Platinum sponsor. Showcasing agentic AI systems with enterprise reliability. Azure AI Services, Azure OpenAI, and GitHub Copilot ecosystem. Microsoft’s booth focus on “building, deploying, and operating agentic AI systems with enterprise reliability” is our exact pitch. WorkingAgents provides the operational layer — scheduling, permissions, crash recovery — that makes agentic AI reliable.

11. Google Cloud — Platinum Sponsor

Gemini already integrated in WorkingAgents. Google Cloud Next is their main event, but their GTC presence matters. We already integrate Gemini (including the free Gemini CLI provider). Deepening the partnership — Cloud Run deployment, Vertex AI integration — extends our multi-cloud story.

12. Oracle Cloud — Platinum Sponsor

Among first to deploy NVIDIA Rubin-based instances. Oracle’s aggressive AI infrastructure push (OCI AI, HeatWave, Autonomous Database) creates an enterprise deployment target. Oracle customers tend to be large, process-heavy organizations — exactly the type that needs orchestration with scheduling and access control.

13. CoreWeave — Platinum Sponsor

GPU cloud specialist. High-performance inference hosting. As WorkingAgents grows to handle more concurrent agent sessions, CoreWeave’s GPU cloud becomes relevant for self-hosted model inference alongside our orchestration layer.

14. Nebius — Platinum Sponsor

European cloud infrastructure. European data residency for GDPR compliance. WorkingAgents + Nebius + Mistral = a fully European AI stack. This is a differentiated offering that no American competitor can easily match.


Tier 3 — Consulting and Systems Integrators

These companies sell AI solutions to enterprises. Partnership here means channel sales — they deploy WorkingAgents as the orchestration layer inside their client engagements.

15. Deloitte — Booth #1601

Platinum sponsor. Showcasing Zora AI (domain-specific AI agents) and Silicon2Service. Deloitte deploys AI across financial services, healthcare, government, and manufacturing. Their Zora AI platform builds domain-specific agents — agents that need scheduling, task persistence, and access control. WorkingAgents is the operational layer Zora needs underneath. Deloitte’s client base (Fortune 500, government agencies) represents the highest-value channel partnership at GTC.

16. TCS — Booth #231

Diamond sponsor. Focus: agentic AI, physical AI, real-time AI systems. Tata Consultancy Services has 600,000+ employees and thousands of enterprise clients. Their GTC focus on “agentic AI for enhanced decision-making and enterprise productivity” maps directly to WorkingAgents. As a systems integrator, TCS could deploy WorkingAgents across dozens of client engagements. One TCS partnership is worth 50 direct sales.

17. Accenture — Platinum Sponsor

Showcasing Physical AI, Industry AI, and AI Factories. Similar to Deloitte but even larger. Accenture’s AI practice already deploys agents with NVIDIA’s technology stack. WorkingAgents as a middleware layer — sitting between Accenture’s custom agents and their clients’ systems — fills the operational gap they are currently solving with custom code on every engagement.

18. Cognizant — Exhibitor

Presenting multi-agent systems for life sciences and retail AI. Cognizant’s multi-agent session (“Scale Multi-Agent for Accelerated Clinical Operation Systems”) is a direct use case for WorkingAgents’ orchestration. Clinical trial operations require scheduled tasks, escalation chains, audit trails, and access control — all features we have.

19. NTT DATA — Booth #3316

Silver sponsor. Autonomous agents for sensor data, video analytics, incident detection. NTT DATA’s agent use cases (monitoring, anomaly detection, incident response) align with WorkingAgents’ Monitor module and alarm-based scheduling. Our existing monitor + pushover + alarm pipeline is a reference implementation for their agent patterns.

20. Capgemini — Demo at AWS Booth

Digital twins, ADAS, AI solutions. Another large systems integrator with enterprise reach. Capgemini’s automotive and manufacturing AI work could use WorkingAgents for production scheduling and quality monitoring workflows.

21. WWT — Booth #1821

Diamond sponsor. Technology integrator. World Wide Technology bridges vendors and enterprises. They could position WorkingAgents alongside NVIDIA’s NIM microservices as part of an enterprise AI deployment package.


Tier 4 — Enterprise Software and Vertical AI

These companies build products for specific industries. Partnership means integration — WorkingAgents as the orchestration layer behind their AI features.

22. Shopify

Confirmed participant. E-commerce platform with 2M+ merchants. AI agents for Shopify merchants — inventory alerts, customer follow-up scheduling, order anomaly detection — map directly to WorkingAgents’ tools. A Shopify app powered by WorkingAgents orchestration could serve hundreds of thousands of merchants.

23. Siemens

Confirmed participant. Industrial AI, digital twins, manufacturing automation. WorkingAgents’ alarm and scheduling system complements Siemens’ industrial monitoring — trigger notifications when sensor thresholds are breached, schedule maintenance tasks, escalate unresolved issues.

24. Dassault Systèmes

Confirmed participant. 3DEXPERIENCE platform, PLM, simulation. Their platform’s workflow automation could benefit from WorkingAgents’ persistent task scheduling for long-running simulation jobs and approval chains.

25. Canva

Confirmed participant. Design platform with AI features. Canva’s enterprise tier could use WorkingAgents for scheduled content generation workflows — “generate and review social media assets every Monday at 9am.”

26. Adobe

Confirmed participant. Creative and marketing tools. Adobe’s Firefly AI and marketing automation products could integrate with WorkingAgents for campaign scheduling, content pipeline orchestration, and multi-step approval workflows.

27. Johnson & Johnson

Confirmed participant. Healthcare and pharmaceutical. Clinical trial scheduling, regulatory compliance workflows, and patient follow-up chains are direct use cases for alarm-based orchestration with audit trails.


Tier 5 — AI Infrastructure and Data

These companies provide infrastructure that enhances WorkingAgents’ capabilities.

28. Hugging Face

Confirmed participant. Model hub and inference APIs. WorkingAgents could pull models from Hugging Face for self-hosted inference, giving clients a fully private AI stack without external API calls.

29. Snowflake — Demo at AWS Booth

Machine learning acceleration. Data warehouse with AI features. WorkingAgents could query Snowflake for data-driven agent decisions — “if this metric exceeds threshold, trigger this workflow.”

30. Zilliz — Demo at AWS Booth

Multimodal AI search (Milvus vector database). Vector search enhances WorkingAgents’ RAG capabilities. Adding Milvus as a retrieval backend for our NIS (CRM) and document tools would improve search quality across all modules.

31. Fortanix — Booth #3117

Confidential AI platform. Data security and encryption for AI workloads. WorkingAgents already implements AES-256-CTR encryption for access control keys. Fortanix’s confidential computing could add hardware-level security for our most sensitive deployments (financial services, healthcare).

32. Supermicro — Diamond Sponsor

AI server infrastructure. For clients who want on-premise WorkingAgents deployments with dedicated GPU inference, Supermicro provides the hardware stack.


Tier 6 — Emerging AI Companies

Smaller or more specialized companies worth a conversation.

33. Genspark

Confirmed participant. AI search engine — potential integration as a search tool in WorkingAgents.

34. OpenAI

Confirmed participant. Already supported via OpenRouter in WorkingAgents. Direct API partnership could improve integration.

35. Meta

Confirmed participant. Llama models for self-hosted inference. Open-weight models running on-premise with WorkingAgents orchestration.

36. Black Forest Labs

Confirmed participant. Image generation (FLUX). Could extend WorkingAgents’ tts_speak pattern to image generation tasks.

37. Inception Labs

Confirmed participant. Diffusion-based LLM. Novel inference approach that could become a provider option.

38. Runway

Confirmed participant. Video generation AI. Scheduled video generation workflows are a natural fit for WorkingAgents’ alarm system.


The Approach

GTC is four days. With 990 exhibitors, you cannot visit every booth. Prioritize by tier:

Day 1 (March 17): Tier 1 — LangChain, Perplexity, Mistral. These are the keynote speakers. They will be accessible at after-parties and side events. Bring a laptop with a live demo.

Day 2 (March 18): Tier 3 — Deloitte (Booth 1601), TCS (Booth 231), Accenture. The consulting firms have the biggest multiplier effect. One partnership here equals dozens of enterprise deployments.

Day 3 (March 19): Tier 2 — AWS (Booth 921), Microsoft (Booth 521). Cloud partnerships take longer to formalize but are essential for enterprise credibility. Start the conversation, exchange contacts, follow up with a deployment architecture proposal.

Throughout: Walk the Inception Pavilion (55+ startups). These companies are early-stage and actively looking for infrastructure partners. WorkingAgents as their orchestration layer is an easy pitch — they are building agents, we manage the operational complexity.

What to show: A 90-second demo. Open WorkingAgents. Schedule a push notification for “in 2 minutes.” Show the alarm fire, the notification arrive on your phone, the completion tracked in the audit log. Then show the MCP tool list — 86 tools, per-user permissions, any LLM provider. That is worth more than any slide deck.


The Bottom Line

Out of 990 GTC exhibitors, at least 38 companies have direct synergy with WorkingAgents. The highest-value targets are not the biggest names — they are the consulting firms (Deloitte, TCS, Accenture) who deploy AI solutions into enterprises every week. One channel partnership with a systems integrator creates more revenue than a hundred direct sales.

The AI agent frameworks (LangChain, Decagon, CodeRabbit) are the technology partnerships that validate the product. The cloud providers (AWS, Azure, Google Cloud) are the infrastructure partnerships that enable deployment. The consulting firms are the revenue partnerships that scale the business.

GTC is nine days away. Prepare the demo. Book the flights. The companies are all in one building.

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