Full cloud is the goal but you can’t do it in one step. Hybrid is the bridge. Run new workloads in Azure while on-premises systems stay operational. Migrate in controlled phases without disrupting what’s running.
A permanent mixed environment, with some workloads staying put- data residency requirements, manufacturing floor systems, or infrastructure under long-term lease that can’t simply be switched off.
Many organisations have moved some services to the cloud but still carry on-premises systems. Hybrid management through Azure Arc brings these environments under consistent governance, security, and monitoring.
Through Azure Arc, you can apply Azure management, security policies, and monitoring to servers and applications running in your own data centre, using the same tools, the same dashboards, and the same governance controls as your Azure workloads. You’re not managing two separate environments, but one environment that spans two locations.
A manufacturing business might keep production control systems on-premises (latency-critical, cannot tolerate network dependency) while running ERP, analytics, and collaboration in Azure. A financial services firm might keep regulated customer data on-premises while using Azure for processing, reporting, and DR. Hybrid makes both possible without compromise.
For South African businesses with POPIA obligations, data residency requirements from customers, or sector-specific regulatory constraints, hybrid lets you keep sensitive data where governance requires it. Azure services can then be accessed for processing, backup, and analytics.
On-premises infrastructure with proper UPS and generator backup can be more resilient than cloud-only setups during extended outages. Hybrid architectures can be designed to keep critical operations running locally when connectivity drops, syncing with Azure when it restores.
Personal information, financial records, and health data carry residency and access control obligations. Azure’s Johannesburg and Cape Town regions address residency, but some businesses need physical control over hardware as well. Hybrid accommodates both.
Replacing working infrastructure purely to achieve cloud purity is expensive and disruptive. If your ERP runs on SQL Server 2019 on hardware that’s three years old, the business case for replacing it isn’t there yet. Hybrid lets you extend Azure capabilities to that infrastructure without replacing it prematurely.
Keeping latency-sensitive workloads local while centralising management and reporting in Azure is often the right architecture. This works for businesses with multiple sites, branches, warehouses, or manufacturing plants.
We assess your current environment, your workload requirements, and your constraints — regulatory, latency, budget, and timeline. Output: a hybrid architecture that places workloads correctly and is operationally manageable, not just technically sound.
Azure Arc deployment, network configuration, identity integration across on-premises Active Directory and Azure AD, security policy alignment, and monitoring setup across both environments. Done without disrupting what’s running.
Hybrid environments need active management — patching, security monitoring, performance optimisation, and governance enforcement across both layers. Braintree provides this as a managed service, so your internal team isn’t carrying the operational burden of running two environments.
Hybrid is your long-term architecture if you have:
Hybrid is your stop on the way to full migration if: