Coalesce Automation Inc.

10/23/2025 | Press release | Archived content

Rewriting the Migration Playbook With AI

Transcript

Guest

Gleb Mezhanskiy
CEO & Founder

Data migrations have long been the costly, painful bottleneck of modernization, dragging on for years and carrying multi-million-dollar price tags. But AI is already flipping that script.

Gleb Mezhanskiy, founder & CEO of Datafold, who has been deep in the trenches of AI-driven migrations, joins us on the Data T podcast to unpack how AI automation is finally making it realistic to move off entrenched legacy ETL tools. Drawing on his years as a hands-on data engineer and PM (including leading a massive migration initiative at Lyft), Gleb explains where migrations go off the rails: millions of lines of legacy code and lack of automation lead to massive human time sunk into reconciliation and QA. He shares how Datafold attacks the problem end-to-end, using agents and data diffing to translate and validate at scale, so teams can "lift and shift" quickly, then refactor with confidence on modern stacks like Snowflake and Coalesce.

Beyond migrations, Gleb and podcast host, Coalesce co-founder and CEO Armon Petrossian, dig into how AI is reshaping data engineering itself. They argue AI won't replace great engineers; it elevates them, shifting work from tedious rewrites to higher-leverage design, governance, and outcomes. The teams that master AI-assisted workflows, evaluation, and modern patterns will widen the gap, moving from weeks of manual effort to rapid, continuous delivery.

Key Topics

  • Data migration challenges
  • The role of AI in data migrations
  • Limitations of generic AI tools and LLM models for migration projects
  • How AI is reshaping data engineering roles
  • Predictions for data infrastructure
  • AI for productivity
Coalesce Automation Inc. published this content on October 23, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on March 03, 2026 at 11:10 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]