
Cloud Deliberate · Infrastructure strategy
Being cloud deliberate isn't pro- or anti-cloud. It's workload-by-workload decisions that keep the benefits of the cloud and give you back control.
For more than a decade, cloud-first has been the default choice for speed, flexibility and scale. Today, public cloud is mature, and the landscape keeps moving.
The truth has emerged that maintaining control comes with trade-offs. Misconfigured resources and poor pricing decisions push costs higher than expected. The pace of change demands constant attention to make the right security and financial calls.
Repatriation, a trend since 2018, isn't a retreat. It's a rebalance, part of a multi- or hybrid-cloud strategy. We saw the need to sharpen the focus onto what matters: how to be deliberate in your cloud management.
Four principles that reduce noise, align teams and keep cloud decisions tied to organisational priorities rather than short-term trends.
Automation, infrastructure as code, self-service platforms and loosely coupled architectures, wherever the workload runs.
Decisions grounded in an explicit reading of your landscape, constraints and outcomes, rather than habit or hype.
Architectures that tolerate change. Decisions that can be revisited when costs, regulations or requirements shift.
Reduce cognitive load. Clear defaults and paved roads point teams toward the preferred path without removing autonomy.
Shift operational work from individual actions to shared definitions. Versioned, reviewed, deployed in a controlled way, so the work stays visible, auditable, and reversible.
Audit the systems, skills and debt you have. Make regulatory and contractual boundaries explicit. Define the operating model you want before choosing technology.
Choose technologies that run across environments. Favour open standards. Keep data portable. Design for reversibility, not for running everything everywhere.
Treat cost, performance, security and compliance as ongoing work. FinOps practices and regular review surface change before constraints become entrenched.
A supported, well-understood way of building and operating systems. Deviations stay possible, but explicit and justified.
A balanced approach drawn from Andrew Harmel-Law's work on facilitating software architecture, with light additions. Speed and alignment, together.
Authority sits closest to the point of impact.
Input from those affected and from experts before the choice is locked.
Filter by impact and reversibility. One-way doors get more scrutiny.
Principles, standards and tech radars set the guardrails.
ADRs capture context, options and reasoning. Distributed becomes safe.
The reasons companies report losing control. Each one is solvable once it's named.
Elastic pricing rewards correct configuration and punishes drift. Misconfigured auto-scaling, idle resources and egress fees accumulate quietly.
Advanced controls, but a moving boundary. Misunderstood ownership leads to data exposure and IAM gaps.
Pre-audited infrastructure helps. Constant platform evolution and overly permissive defaults create regulatory risk.
Multi-tenancy means noisy neighbours. Hybrid splits add network hops. Data gravity quietly pulls workloads where the data already lives.
Proprietary tools, formats and tightly integrated services create dependencies, and expose you to the provider's pricing and roadmap.
Concentration on a handful of hyperscalers makes legal and political risk an architectural concern, not just a procurement one.
Hundreds of services, two operating models, constant change. The question is not whether complexity exists, but where it lives and who can manage it.
Map your current cloud setup, surface what's costing you control, and leave with a prioritised path forward.
A focused working session that aligns architects and platform teams on how to make cloud decisions.
A hands-on engagement that installs the operating model: automation, hybrid patterns, FinOps, clear defaults.
Pick what fits: the white paper for a deep read, a quick note for more information, or a lunch or half-day workshop to map your landscape together.