Bryntum Enterprise UI Infrastructure: Key Findings
The global enterprise application market is projected to reach about $625 billion by 2030, according to Grand View Research.
This projection reflects how dependent organizations have become on software to manage projects, coordinate resources, and track operations across complex teams.
Companies like Bryntum help developers build the interfaces that power those systems.
Bryntum develops web components for project management and resource scheduling, including Gantt charts, schedulers, and data grids used in enterprise web applications.
“Most large clients find us after extensive evaluation of grid and scheduling solutions. Our products are often benchmarked against internal tools and open source alternatives,” says Mats Bryntse, CEO and founder of Bryntum.
In an exclusive DesignRush interview, Bryntse breaks down:
- How enterprise teams evaluate grid and scheduling tools before adoption
- What builds trust with major clients like BMW and the U.S. Navy
- Why predictable updates and API stability matter in mission-critical software
Keep reading for Bryntse’s insights on building reliable UI infrastructure for complex enterprise applications.
Who Is Mats Bryntse?
Mats Bryntse is the CEO and founder of Bryntum, a company that builds advanced JavaScript UI components for enterprise web applications.
Bryntum’s products are used by Fortune 500 companies and government agencies worldwide to power mission-critical business software.
Why Enterprise Teams Carefully Evaluate UI Infrastructure
Enterprise software teams rarely adopt new UI infrastructure without careful testing.
Scheduling systems, data grids, and planning interfaces often sit at the center of operational workflows, which means performance and reliability matter from day one.
“Most large clients find us after extensive evaluation of grid and scheduling solutions. Our products are often benchmarked against internal tools and open source alternatives,” Bryntse says.
Those evaluations help organizations determine whether a tool can support complex workflows at scale.
Bryntse says factors like usability, documentation quality, and vendor support often influence the final decision when companies select tools for mission-critical systems.
How Bryntum Supports Agencies and Integrators
Enterprise applications built around scheduling, planning, and operational data can be difficult to implement without clear documentation.
Bryntum provides examples, guides, and onboarding support to help agencies and integration partners understand how the components work.
“We invest heavily in documentation, examples, code snippets, and onboarding support,” Bryntse says.
Partners can also reach Bryntum’s technical team for early guidance during implementations, and the company offers professional services for custom integrations or feature sponsorship.
This support helps teams get up to speed faster and deliver working solutions for their clients.
Why Predictability Is Critical for Enterprise Platforms
Enterprise systems often run for years and connect to multiple internal platforms.
Frequent changes or unstable APIs can introduce issues that ripple across entire software environments.
“Enterprise projects depend on predictability," Bryntse says.
"We balance a fast release cycle with strong API stability, extensive test coverage, and long-term support ensuring each update delivers value without introducing regressions or disrupting large-scale deployments."
For companies operating mission-critical systems, predictable updates help ensure stability while still allowing platforms to evolve.
How Partner Feedback Shapes Product Development
Bryntum’s partner ecosystem also plays a role in how the company develops its products.
Agencies and solution partners often work directly with customers implementing Bryntum components.
That experience gives them practical insight into how the tools perform in real deployments across complex enterprise web applications.
“Partner feedback directly influences our roadmap. Solution partners push for flexibility, better extensibility, and share valuable insights from their customers,” Bryntse says.
Those insights help the Bryntum team refine its APIs and documentation so developers can integrate the components more easily into complex enterprise applications.
The Future of Enterprise Software Interfaces
From project planning to resource scheduling, modern interfaces are expected to turn large volumes of operational data into tools teams can actually use.
Enterprise software used to be about storing information.
Now it’s about turning that information into systems teams rely on to run projects, manage resources, and coordinate work across the business.
“Customers like BMW and the US Navy chose us because we lead our niche and deliver proven reliability in mission-critical environments,” Bryntse says.
As companies continue building more advanced internal platforms, tools that simplify complex workflows will play an increasingly important role.








