DatriseAI-first ETL

Bronto Snowflake

AI-first ETL from Bronto into Snowflake. Governed entities, incremental sync, typed landing tables.

How Datrise loads Bronto into Snowflake

Datrise syncs Bronto's records, events, and configuration objects into Snowflake as a typed table per source entity. Flexible or custom fields land in VARIANT columns, and timestamps such as created, updated, and status changes are typed as TIMESTAMP_TZ.

Sync is incremental: Datrise uses staged loads merged on stable id with MERGE, so credits scale with change volume, not table size, so re-runs update only what changed. Automatic micro-partitioning, with optional clustering keys on high-cardinality ids. Snowflake upper-cases unquoted identifiers, so Datrise standardizes on lower-case quoted names to keep column references stable.

Ideal for central analytics warehouses feeding BI and AI workloads.

Endpoints

Bronto: SaaS or API data source for analytics and warehouse sync.

Snowflake: Cloud data warehouse with separated compute and storage.

How Bronto entities map to Snowflake

Bronto entitySnowflake objectNotes
recordsbronto_recordsid PK · custom fields → VARIANT columns
eventsbronto_eventsTIMESTAMP_TZ events
configuration objectsbronto_configuration_objectsid PK · linked to bronto_records

FAQ

How does Datrise handle Bronto's custom fields in Snowflake?

Flexible values are stored as VARIANT columns, so new fields don't require a migration; strongly-typed fields — dates, numbers, and references — are promoted to native Snowflake types.

How does the Bronto to Snowflake sync stay up to date?

It runs incrementally — Datrise uses staged loads merged on stable id with MERGE, so credits scale with change volume, not table size.

Related pipelines

Early access

Connect Bronto to Snowflake the easy way

Skip brittle scripts and manual exports. Join the waitlist to get a guided setup, AI-assisted mapping, and reliable incremental sync for this integration.