You're reading revision r1 (2026-06-04). This revision has been superseded. Latest revision: r3 (2026-06-05) — read the current version →

Integrations

PackOps connects to the systems your business already runs on — Salesforce first — and it bends to your process instead of asking you to bend to it.

Salesforce

PackOps and the whole AlphaCorr line connect to Salesforce, typically in a matter of hours once we understand what you want connected. The same surface plugs into the Salesforce Agentic Enterprise, so AI agents can work with your packaging data right where your business already lives. Tell us your priorities and we wire them first.

Esko WebCenter

Connect to Esko WebCenter once API access is enabled on your side. If you already have that in place, the integration is a matter of days.

PackOps native

Web, mobile, and desktop already share one workspace. Captures, dielines, and 3D mockups flow between them with nothing to wire up — the integration you don't have to build.

Built to bend — SDK + MCP

Every part of the line carries its own SDK and an MCP integration surface. Features can be added, overlaid, or removed quickly — by our team, or by AI agents working under our account or yours. A spec sheet you'd lay out differently, a die-maker handoff that needs a field your shop relies on: that's a fast change, not a feature request that waits for a release cycle. The point of the SDK and MCP is precisely to bend the software to your process rather than the other way around.

Your stack, your process — we connect to it, and we bend to it.

Revision r1 · published 2026-06-04.
Initial publication — Salesforce (incl. Agentic Enterprise), Esko WebCenter, PackOps native, and the SDK + MCP surface that bends the software to your process.

Permanent link to this revision: /principles/integrations/r1

Revision history:

  • r1 · 2026-06-04
  • r2 · 2026-06-05
  • r3 · 2026-06-05 (current)

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