- Cloud transformation is not a lift-and-shift project; it is a decision sequence prioritized by business impact and dependency.
- When observability, incident management, and automation are designed from day one, cloud becomes a new operating model — not just relocated infrastructure.
- FinOps discipline manages cost visibility alongside performance; when security and compliance are designed in early, rework drops sharply.
Migration strategy
Not every workload should move at the same pace. Prioritization has to reflect business impact, dependency density, and modernization need, otherwise cloud transformation quickly becomes an expensive reshuffling exercise.
Without a clear migration sequence, cloud transformation quickly turns into cost and complexity; prioritize by business impact, dependency, and modernization need.
Operating model
Cloud is not just infrastructure relocation; it is a new way of operating. Observability, incident routines, automation, and team boundaries must be designed from day one.
- Define observability and incident management from day one of the transformation.
- Standardize automation and repeatable deployment.
- Put the shared-responsibility boundaries between teams in writing.
FinOps discipline
Performance optimization is not sustainable without cost visibility. Team ownership, tagging standards, and regular usage reviews make cloud investments governable.
Performance optimization is not sustainable without cost visibility; a tagging standard and team ownership make cloud investment governable.
Security and compliance
Identity, network segmentation, and logging requirements should not be postponed until after migration. When security and compliance are designed in early, rework drops sharply.
Security and compliance are not a topic left for after migration but the first design decision; planned early, rework drops sharply.
Exit strategy and data portability
A healthy cloud decision also plans the way out. The EU Data Act (Regulation (EU) 2023/2854) regulates switching between cloud services and the portability of data in a structured, machine-readable format. When the data format, switching period, and contract terms are settled at design time, provider dependency becomes a manageable risk.
A cloud strategy is not only an entry plan; when data portability and the provider-switch scenario are settled at design time, dependency risk is managed from the start.
- Put the data export format and switching period for critical workloads into the contract.
- Review the provider-switch or return scenario with a regular tabletop exercise.
- Align portability requirements with the frame drawn by regulations such as the EU Data Act.
Preguntas Frecuentes
Should I move all workloads to the cloud at once?
No; without prioritizing by business impact, dependency density, and modernization need, migration usually produces cost and complexity.
Is cloud only infrastructure relocation?
Cloud is a new operating model; observability, incident management, automation, and shared-responsibility boundaries must be designed from the first day of the transformation.
How do I keep cloud cost under control?
FinOps discipline — team-level ownership, a tagging standard, and regular usage reviews — makes cost visibility governable alongside performance optimization.
How do I manage vendor lock-in?
Plan the exit strategy at design time: the data export format, switching period, and cost items should be settled in the contract; the EU Data Act's provisions easing switching between cloud services are a strong reference frame for these expectations.