StackTrack Professional Services

Cloud migration is not the goal. An operable platform is.

Move workloads to the cloud with clearer migration strategy, stronger platform foundations, and Secure by Design controls that still work after cutover.

Assess migration readiness
Explore our Secure by Design and True North framework
Trusted by teams shipping globally
4.9/ 5Average rating
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What it is

For organisations comparing cloud migration services, the important question is not just who can move the workloads, but who can design the platform the team will depend on afterwards.

StackTrack Cloud Migrations is a service for teams moving applications, data, and platform responsibility into a new cloud environment without inheriting a new set of cost, security, and ownership problems.

The service covers migration planning, target platform design, landing-zone foundations, workload transition, and the operational model needed to support change after the move.

This is not migration as a one-off relocation project. It is a platform-led service designed to leave teams with a stronger operating model.

How StackTrack approaches migration

StackTrack takes a platform-first approach. The provider matters, but the harder problem is designing an environment that your team can operate safely, change consistently, and govern without relying on tribal knowledge.

That means shaping migration around platform operability, secure-by-design controls, workload strategy, delivery readiness, and long-term ownership rather than only around infrastructure movement.

  • Decide whether migration is the right move before committing to it

  • Choose the right migration strategy for each workload

  • Design identity, networking, and delivery controls early

  • Build the target environment for Day-2 operability

  • Move in controlled waves with clear rollback thinking

The next step should be to make the critical decisions explicit early, before migration scope hardens around assumptions the organisation will have to live with afterwards.

Avoid major pitfalls

  • Why migrations underperform

    Most migrations do not fail because a cloud platform is unavailable. They underperform because the target environment is treated as a destination instead of an operating platform.

    • Costs rise without enough control or visibility

    • Security and access boundaries are designed too late

    • Environments become fragile or drift between teams

    • Delivery pipelines break or lose consistency

    • Ownership is unclear after cutover

    • A single migration approach is forced onto every workload

    When those problems are not addressed upfront. The cloud estate inherits the same delivery friction as the legacy environment, only with new commercial and operational complexity layered on top.

  • What we will not do

    This service is differentiated as much by what it avoids as by what it delivers.

    • Recommend cloud by default if the case is weak

    • Treat lift-and-shift as the answer for every workload

    • Rely on vendor defaults where they create security or operability risk

    • Leave identity, networking, and ownership decisions until late in the programme

    • Treat cutover as the finish line and ignore what the team has to run afterwards

Trusted by teams shipping globally

Customer-rated 4.9/5 for responsiveness and real-world impact.

Linux Foundation
Markel
Waitrose
LVMH Digital
BlackCrows
tag-heuer-logo
Glasswall
insead
  • Customer-rated 4.9/5

    Average rating across delivery and support engagements.

  • Proven with engineering-led organisations

    Including Linux Foundation, LVMH Digital, Markel and others.

  • Senior engineers, not a rotating bench

    Experienced operators who can unblock teams fast.

  • Security & compliance built-in

    ISO 27001-aligned operations and GDPR-conscious delivery.

  • Outcome focus

    Fewer failed builds, faster releases, and calmer on-call.

What you get

Target platform architecture

A target platform shaped around how the organisation releases, supports, and governs change, not a generic cloud blueprint.

Landing-zone and environment design

Environment boundaries and platform structure that make ownership clear and stop delivery friction being recreated in the target cloud.

Identity and access model

Access boundaries that reflect who operates and changes services, so accountability remains clear under pressure.

Delivery and release workflows

A migration path that preserves release confidence instead of creating parallel manual delivery systems.

Observability baseline

Visibility that supports cutover decisions, rollback confidence, and day-two ownership rather than delayed hardening work.

Migration sequencing and cutover plan

A workload sequence that reflects dependency risk, validation needs, and the fact that the migration is not finished when workloads run.

Capabilities

Good Start

Readiness and assessment

Assess the current estate, migration drivers, workload constraints, and commercial rationale before committing to the programme shape.

Best Practice

Landing-zone foundation

Design the target environment with identity, networking, environment standards, and guardrails that support safer long-term operation.

Right Workload

Workload strategy selection

Choose the right migration path for each workload, from rehost and replatform to deeper redesign where the platform demands it.

Compliance

Governance, security, and cost

Build access control, compliance thinking, cost guardrails, and operational governance into the platform rather than layering them on afterwards.

Improvement

Modernisation and optimisation

Improve the parts of the estate that need a better long-term cloud fit so the migration leaves a cleaner, more useful platform behind.

How the service works

Move or modernise

The steps below show how StackTrack turns that early clarity into a scoped migration engagement.

1

Cloud Migration Readiness Assessment

Decide whether migration is the right move now, which workloads should not move as-is, and what would create avoidable risk if carried forward.

2

Migration Readiness Review

Make the early decisions explicit before scope hardens: workload fit, target platform shape, control ownership, delivery impact, and the conditions for a safe start.

3

Migration Foundation Sprint

Resolve the decisions that cannot wait until cutover, so the target platform is ready for change before the first workload lands.

4

Scoped Migration Engagement

Move the right workloads once the platform, delivery path, and operating model are clear, with ownership defined beyond cutover.

Platform shape

Not every workload should move as-is

Some workloads buy speed through rehosting. Others only carry forward cost, latency, or support pain. The decision should be made workload by workload, not programme by programme.

Design for operating reality

The target platform should reflect how teams release, support, and govern change, not an idealised future organisation.

Standardise where it reduces friction

Shared patterns matter when they make change safer and faster. Over-standardising early usually creates exceptions the team has to live with later.

Separate concerns before environments

Clear boundaries for teams, services, and data are more valuable than multiplying accounts or subscriptions without a responsibility model.

Control boundaries

Put controls where work happens

Controls are effective when they are built into delivery and day-to-day change, not added as a distant approval layer.

Keep access decisions close to ownership

Identity boundaries should reflect who operates, changes, and supports the service, so accountability remains obvious under pressure.

Evidence should fall out of the platform

Auditability, policy conformance, and change traceability should be natural outputs of the way work is done, not parallel reporting exercises.

Avoid centralising exceptions

A control model that only works by granting one-off exceptions will drift quickly once migration pressure increases.

Delivery and operating model

Migration should not break the delivery system

If the move slows releases, weakens rollback, or creates parallel manual paths, the platform is not ready for migration at scale.

Parallel estates create hidden risk

During migration, both the old and new paths must be operable. Ownership, incident response, and release discipline need to work across both.

The migration is not finished when workloads run

Cutover without support, cost accountability, and operational ownership simply moves the risk into the first quarter after launch.

Choose the right ownership model

Use professional services to make the hard decisions and deliver the change; use support when the team owns the platform but needs escalation depth; use managed service when the platform must run reliably without building a full in-house operating team.

Assess migration readiness

Powered by the Cloud Migration Readiness Assessment

Takes ~3–5 minutesNo email requiredSecure by Design

Tell us about your project

From platform engineering and Kubernetes to secure delivery and operational support, we help teams solve the infrastructure work that slows product delivery down. Let us know what you need and we will point you in the right direction.

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StackTrack Inc is incorporated in Delaware, United States. Servana Managed Services Ltd is registered in England and Wales with number #10551720 and VAT registered with number GB-284560287.