The client is a Middle East-based government authority platform with a clear mandate: make public services digitally accessible, reliable, and trustworthy for citizens across a network of 60+ entities. That means keeping web portals running, mobile apps responsive, and data platforms accurate — every day, at scale, with no margin for the kind of fragmentation and inconsistency their legacy infrastructure had quietly normalized.
Data scattered across dozens of disconnected systems, aging infrastructure straining under growing citizen demand, and manual processes creating governance gaps the organization could no longer ignore; these weren't isolated problems. They were symptoms of an infrastructure that had outgrown itself. Without a way to systematically govern, classify, or quality-control data across entities, and with a fragmented security posture leaving critical systems exposed, the gap between the government's digital ambitions and its operational reality was widening.
Cloud4C moved and consolidated the organization's critical data systems across all entities to Microsoft Azure without disrupting the citizen-facing services running on top of them. An automated data cataloguing framework gave the organization a complete, governed view of its data landscape for the first time — while Azure-native tooling and Infrastructure-as-Code eliminated the manual provisioning overhead that had been slowing teams down. A Zero Trust security architecture with IAM and end-to-end encryption replaced legacy risk controls, and embedded data quality governance ensured the platform would stay accurate and compliant as the organization continued to grow.
60+ Entities Unified under one governed Azure data platform
Zero Trust Enterprise-grade security with IAM and end-to-end encryption
Automated Data processing and provisioning via IaC and Azure-native tools
Governed Centralized data quality, compliance, and audit controls across all entities