Neysa capped a busy week at the India AI Impact Summit 2026 by sharpening its pitch as an India-focused AI infrastructure and sovereign AI provider. The company used a dedicated pavilion, multiple speaker sessions, and live demos to position its platform as a scalable, enterprise-ready foundation for domestic AI deployments.
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Central to the week’s announcements was BharatGen Param2-17B-A2.4B, a multilingual large language model supporting 22 Indian languages and designed for deep reasoning and long-context tasks. Neysa framed Param2 as a cornerstone of India’s sovereign AI ambitions, emphasizing training and deployment on domestic cloud infrastructure to address data residency and regulatory needs.
The company highlighted Param2’s focus on structured, step-by-step logic, tighter instruction alignment, and enterprise-grade reliability across governance, education, enterprise, and public digital infrastructure use cases. This localized, culturally aware approach is aimed at enterprises and public-sector bodies seeking alternatives to imported AI stacks.
Beyond the model launch, Neysa showcased its broader AI and analytics platform at booth 5.5A in Hall 05 with extensive product demos and consultative, use-case led discussions. The firm invited enterprises and digital-native builders to test real-world problems and explore how they could scale production workloads via its “ScaleWithNeysa” message.
A “Dashboard Champs” team was presented as core to Neysa’s go-to-market strategy, underscoring capabilities in data visualization, operational dashboards, and real-time monitoring. By stressing intuitive interfaces and outcome-focused tooling, Neysa aims to make complex AI and observability deployments easier to adopt at scale.
Across the summit communications, Neysa repeatedly emphasized accessible, flexible infrastructure that lets customers scale “their way” while maintaining reliability and control. This narrative is intended to resonate with Indian enterprises that prioritize simplicity of deployment alongside performance and compliance.
Ecosystem collaboration was another theme, with Neysa naming partners such as Protecto, smallest.ai, KOGO, and LatentForce as “force multipliers.” These relationships are positioned to broaden solution coverage in areas like data security and specialized AI capabilities without requiring fully in-house development.
While no financial metrics, customer counts, or contract wins were disclosed, the week’s activity points to a dual track of technology differentiation and brand building. If Neysa successfully converts heightened visibility, multilingual model capabilities, and ecosystem ties into enterprise and government deals, it could strengthen its position in India’s rapidly evolving AI infrastructure market.
Overall, the week marked a significant push by Neysa to claim a leading role in sovereign, India-centric AI infrastructure and services. The company now faces the execution challenge of turning summit interest and product showcase momentum into sustained, recurring revenue and reference deployments.

