Modernizing regulated industries with cloud and agentic AI
Organizations today face mounting pressure to grow revenue, strengthen security, and innovate—often all at the same time. To meet these demands, many are accelerating cloud migration as a way to unlock greater business outcomes. According to the IDC White Paper,1 sponsored by Microsoft, the top driver for moving to the cloud is operational efficiency, with 46% of organizations prioritizing reductions in IT operating costs. Beyond cost savings, cloud infrastructure is also enabling organizations to prepare for increased use of AI (37%), launch new performance intensive applications (30%), improve resilience (26%), and meet governance, risk, and compliance requirements (24%).
Yet despite broad cloud adoption, migration and modernization remain complex. Legacy architectures, fragmented environments, and persistent skills gaps continue to slow progress, pushing organizations to find ways to migrate faster while minimizing operational risk.
The IDC study highlights agentic AI as a critical unlock. These intelligent systems automate assessments, orchestrate migration and modernization efforts, and optimize operations across hybrid environments—helping organizations shift from periodic, manual initiatives to continuous, adaptive modernization. This momentum is driving unprecedented growth, with IDC forecasting the public cloud services market will reach USD1.9 trillion by 2029.
While migration frameworks may be horizontal, their real-world impact is industry-specific. Healthcare, financial services, and manufacturing each face unique constraints shaped by regulation, operational risk, and mission-critical systems.
In this blog, we explore the key migration and modernization challenges across these three industries—healthcare, manufacturing, and financial services—through real customer stories that highlight the tangible impact cloud adoption is delivering today.
Healthcare: Modernizing securely while powering next-generation clinical experiences
Microsoft for healthcare
Achieve more with AIHealthcare faces the toughest modernization headwinds: strict regulations (HIPAA/HITECH, HITRUST), fragmented clinical data across electronic health records (EHRs) and imaging systems, aging on-premises infrastructure resulting in high Capex, and heightened exposure to ransomware.1 Clinical environments also demand extremely low latency and high reliability.
The IDC study notes that these constraints slow modernization—but accelerate the need for it, as organizations push to scale telehealth, imaging workloads, genomics pipelines, and AI-powered clinical workflows.1
What healthcare organizations need, according to the IDC study:
- Secure, compliant integration across EHRs, picture archiving and communication systems (PACS), genomics systems, and Internet of Things (IoT) medical devices.1
- Elastic compute for high-throughput imaging and genomics.
- Stronger disaster recovery and recovery time performance.1
- Ambient documentation and AI-supported diagnostics.
- Secure clinician collaboration and modern patient digital front doors.
Customer spotlight: Franciscan Health
Facing aging infrastructure and disaster recovery risks, Franciscan adopted a pragmatic workload placement strategy—moving its Epic EHR to Microsoft Azure.
The results included:
- $45 million in savings over five years after migrating Epic to Azure.
- 90% faster disaster recovery compared to the prior environment.
- Around a 30-minute failover, reduced from hours.
- $10–$12 million per day in potential downtime risk avoided.
Learn more about Franciscan Health’s journey to migrate its Epic EHR to Azure.
Healthcare’s modernization mandate is clear: reduce operational risk, meet regulatory demands, and harness cloud AI to improve patient outcomes.
Financial services: Enabling real-time intelligence and automated compliance
Microsoft for financial services
Accelerate business valueFinancial institutions operate in one of the most regulated environments, including the payment card industry data security standard (PCI DSS), the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX), the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), Basel capital frameworks, and know your customer (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML) requirements, and rely heavily on legacy mainframes that are difficult to modernize. Today, regulatory pressure is intensifying further as new frameworks such as the EU’s Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) and the EU AI Act raise the bar for operational resilience, third-party risk management, model transparency, and ongoing compliance monitoring. Under DORA, financial services firms must demonstrate continuous information and communication technology (ICT) risk management, advanced incident reporting, and resilience testing across critical systems and cloud service providers. Meanwhile, the EU AI Act introduces governance requirements for high-risk AI systems, including explainability, data lineage, human oversight, and auditability—with direct implications for fraud models, credit scoring, and customer decisioning platforms.
IDC interviews highlight accelerating demand for real-time risk analytics, fraud detection, digital onboarding, and infrastructure elasticity to support peak activity—capabilities that are increasingly mandated, not optional.1
Key challenges the IDC study identifies:
- Strict data residency, model risk governance, explainability, and eDiscovery requirements.1
- Heightened expectations for operational resilience, cyber defense, and third-party risk oversight.
- Legacy systems and common business-oriented language (COBOL)-based batch processes resistant to change.
- Rapidly evolving regulatory mandates requiring continuous compliance rather than point-in-time audits.
Cloud—especially especially platform as a service (PaaS) and managed services—helps financial institutions shift from static, batch-driven compliance to continuous controls and real-time observability. By reducing batch windows from hours to minutes, modern cloud platforms enable real-time insights, automated evidence collection, resilient architectures, and policy-driven compliance workflows aligned with DORA and AI governance requirements.1 Learn more about how Microsoft can help financial institutions navigate these requirements.
Customer spotlight: Crediclub
To accelerate product innovation and meet expectations from Mexico’s national banking and securities commission (CNBV), Mexican fintech Crediclub modernized its databases to a serverless platform as a service (PaaS) architecture and adopted microservices.1
The impact:
- Uptime improved from around 80% to 99.5%.
- 90% reduction in network latency through Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) and dark fiber.
- Rapid deployment of new financial products via Kubernetes and DevSecOps.
For financial institutions, modernization is no longer just about efficiency—it is foundational to resilience, trustworthy AI, and regulatory compliance at scale.
Manufacturing: Unifying IT and OT for predictive, data-driven industrial operations
Microsoft for manufacturing
Explore solutionsManufacturers operate in one of the most complex operating environments—defined by legacy and proprietary operational technology (OT) protocols, historically air-gapped manufacturing execution systems (MES) and supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) systems, and globally distributed supply chains. Stringent low-latency requirements for safety-critical systems, intermittent connectivity at the edge, and the need to protect intellectual property further compound the challenge. The ability to modernize and unify these environments—without compromising safety, reliability, or performance—represents a critical inflection point for industrial transformation.
Unique modernization challenges according to the IDC study:
- Ultra-low latency requirements for safety-critical operations.
- Massive telemetry ingestion and time-series analytics at scale.
- Operational complexity across global, distributed supply chains.
- Secure protection of intellectual property across edge and cloud environments.
Opportunities unlocked by cloud:
- Predictive maintenance with IoT ingestion.1
- Reduced unplanned downtime and improved overall equipment effectiveness (OEE).
- Digital twins for plants, lines, and products.
- Computer vision for real-time quality and safety.
- High-performance computing (HPC) simulations for engineering and design.
- Standardized, global data models.
Customer spotlight: ASTEC Industries
ASTEC unified fragmented systems across its rock to road value chain—from aggregate processing through asphalt production and paving—by adopting Azure, modernizing to timeseries databases, and building a universal connectivity platform using Azure IoT Hub, Azure Events Hub, and Power BI.1
The results:
- Realtime operational visibility across fleets.
- Predictive maintenance for reducing downtime.
- New digital services supported by connected equipment.
Manufacturing’s modernization imperative: unify OT and IT, scale real-time intelligence, and enable global efficiency.
Microsoft’s approach: Continuous, intelligent, collaborative modernization
Microsoft’s strategy is grounded in a simple principle: modernization should be continuous, intelligent, and collaborative. The IDC study emphasizes that successful enterprises adopt a balanced, multipath migration strategy, blending rehost, replatform, refactor, and software as a service (SaaS) substitution based on workload criticality.1
Microsoft enables this approach through a comprehensive set of tools and offerings, including Azure Copilot and GitHub Copilot. Agentic automation enables:
- Discovery and dependency mapping.
- Security assessment and 6R recommendations.
- Application refactoring, code remediation, and modernization.
Azure Migrate provides unified discovery, assessment, migration execution, and modernization services. Azure Accelerate complements this with a coordinated framework that includes:
- Guided deployments through Cloud Accelerate Factory.1
- Funding and Azure credits for planning, pilot, and rollout.
- Expert partners and tailored skilling programs.
The IDC study concludes that organizations using Microsoft Azure for migration and modernization achieve lower operational costs, improved resiliency, faster modernization timelines, and stronger security postures—especially in regulated industries.1
Looking ahead: Agentic modernization as the foundation for AI-ready enterprises
Across all industries, IDC’s findings are consistent: agentic AI is emerging as the new force multiplier for modernization, enabling organizations to keep pace with rising complexity, regulatory demands, and competitive pressure.
Healthcare, financial services, and manufacturing each face unique constraints—but cloud modernization remains the foundation for innovation, operational excellence, and enterprise AI.
Microsoft’s approach gives organizations the unified automation, intelligence, and tooling they need to modernize securely and at scale.
- Explore how Azure Copilot accelerates cloud migration.
- Discover GitHub Copilot for app modernization.
- See how Azure Accelerate supports transformation.