DatriseAI-first ETL

Clay Neon

AI-first ETL from Clay into Neon. Governed entities, incremental sync, typed landing tables.

How Datrise loads Clay into Neon

Datrise syncs Clay's contacts, accounts, deals, activities, and lifecycle events into Neon as a typed table per source entity. Flexible or custom fields land in jsonb columns, and timestamps such as created, updated, and status changes are typed as timestamptz.

Sync is incremental: Datrise uses a watermark on updated-at, applied with INSERT … ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE, so re-runs update only what changed. Optional declarative partitioning by load date. Neon separates compute from storage, so Datrise batches writes to keep autoscaling compute from cold-starting on every small change.

Ideal for serverless Postgres workloads that scale to zero between syncs.

Endpoints

Clay: AI-native CRM for relationship data, enrichment, and workflow automation.

Neon: Serverless Postgres destination with branching and autoscaling.

How Clay entities map to Neon

Clay entityNeon objectNotes
contactsclay_contactsid PK · custom fields → jsonb columns
accountsclay_accountsid PK · linked to clay_contacts
dealsclay_dealsid PK · linked to clay_contacts
activitiesclay_activitiestimestamptz events

FAQ

How does Datrise handle Clay's custom fields in Neon?

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

How does the Clay to Neon sync stay up to date?

It runs incrementally — Datrise uses a watermark on updated-at, applied with INSERT … ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE.

Related pipelines

Early access

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