Cloud architects earn the highest salaries

This post was originally published on Info World

I’ve watched cloud careers rise and fall with each new wave of tools, from the early “lift-and-shift everything” days to today’s platform engineering, AI-ready data estates, and security-by-default mandates. Through all of it, the role that stays stubbornly in demand is the cloud architect because the hardest part of cloud has never been spinning up resources. The hard part is making hundreds of decisions that won’t quietly compound into outages, cost blowouts, security gaps, or organizational gridlock.

That’s why, even when organizations are moving from cloud to cloud or swapping one set of managed services for another, they still need deep planning capabilities. The platform names change, the service catalogs get refreshed, and vendors repackage features, but the enterprise constraints remain: regulatory obligations, latency and resiliency requirements, identity and access realities, data gravity, contractual risk, and the simple fact that large companies rarely move in a straight line. Cloud architecture is the discipline that prevents transformation programs from becoming expensive improvisation.

Easy to adopt, hard to industrialize

Most companies can get to cloud quickly. A few motivated teams, a credit card, and some well-meaning enthusiasm can produce working workloads in weeks. What you can’t do quickly is scale that

Read the rest of this post, which was originally published on Info World.

Previous Post

New Data Center Developments: March 2026

Next Post

MWC 2026: Red Hat, Telenor Team Up for Sovereign Norway AI Factory