Outcome · Cloud freedom without lock-in

Cloud where it pays. On-prem where it must.

The choice between 'all cloud' and 'all on-prem' is a false binary. The real question is which workloads belong where, on what economic and compliance terms. Hybrid Cloud Architecture makes that decision deliberate, not accidental.

Workload-by-workload placement PDPL-aware data residency Vendor-portable design

Why this matters now

The problem we solve.

Most cloud strategies are vendor strategies wearing a strategy hat.

Organisations rarely arrive at a single-cloud commitment by deliberate choice. They arrive there through accidents of migration: the team that started on AWS, the SaaS vendor that demanded Azure, the data residency requirement that forced a regional region. By the time anyone draws the architecture diagram, the lock-in has already happened.

At the same time, KSA PDPL and sector-specific data residency requirements are tightening. Some workloads must stay regional; some must stay on-prem; some can run anywhere. A hybrid architecture that respects those constraints — and stays portable — is what separates cloud strategy from cloud consequence.

3.2x
Cloud cost overrun

Industry benchmark — actual versus forecasted spend within 18 months of unstructured cloud migration.

47%
Of workloads

Should have stayed on-prem on TCO grounds — moved anyway under blanket "cloud-first" mandates.

Multi-year
Lock-in horizon

Typical exit cost from a single-provider commitment when business priorities or regulatory rules change.

What you'll have

A posture you can prove.

A workload-aware hybrid posture you can defend on cost, on residency, and on portability.

Workload By-workload placement

Each workload assessed for the right home — cloud, on-prem, edge, or split — based on residency, performance, and total cost.

PDPL Compliant by design

Data residency mapped to KSA + regional regulatory requirements before any migration starts. No "discovered" residency violations later.

Portable Architecture

Designs that survive a vendor switch — not because you will switch, but because the option preserves your leverage.

30–50% TCO improvement

Typical range for organisations correcting all-cloud or all-on-prem positions to a right-sized hybrid posture.

In practice

What this looks like delivered.

A typical engagement runs 6–12 weeks across workload assessment, placement decisions, and topology design. We do not bundle migration with the design — the recommendation has to stand on its own before any workload moves.

The output is a workload-by-workload placement matrix, a target hybrid topology, and an operating model that defines who owns what across cloud and on-prem.

Assess
Workload inventory Cost & performance baseline Residency requirements
Decide
Cloud / on-prem placement Vendor selection Total cost model
Topology
Network connectivity Identity federation Data movement design
Operate
Hybrid operating model FinOps cadence Portability checkpoints

Want a vendor-neutral read on your cloud strategy?

30-minute review of your current cloud posture, with workload-by-workload analysis of where you are paying for the wrong fit. No deck, no pitch.

Regulator angle

Compliance built into the engagement — frameworks aligned, evidence captured at delivery time.

Compliance practice

Talk to a solution architect

Skip the form — reach our delivery lead directly. Honest assessment of fit before you commit.

[email protected]