Cloud Services // Hybrid & Multi-Cloud Architecture
Best for 50–500 user firms with regulatory or latency constraints

Some things stay on the ground. Some things go to the cloud. We design what.

Not everything belongs in the cloud. Manufacturing line software, latency-sensitive trading, legacy regulated systems — these are happier on-prem. The trick is making the on-prem and cloud halves talk to each other reliably, securely, and without a 600ms ping every time someone opens a file. That's the design problem we solve.

60%+
Of mid-sized firms run hybrid by choice, not accident
Hybrid cloud architecture diagram
fig.01
Mississauga
Delivered locally across the Peel Region & Logistics Hub. PIPEDA & ISO 27001 Operational Audits Aligned.
2-Hour On-Site Dispatch
Our distribution center operates around the clock. Senator Networks hardened our network infrastructure and set up local failovers that kept us completely operational through major regional fiber cuts.
David Fletcher, Peel Logistics & Cargo Systems
Sound familiar?

Where pure-cloud fails.

pain 01

The factory floor lost connection to head office.

Cloud-hosted MES system. Internet hiccup. Production stopped for an hour.

pain 02

Healthcare PACS system can't go to the cloud.

Regulator-mandated on-prem retention. But everything else is cloud. Now both worlds need to talk.

pain 03

Trading desk needs sub-millisecond latency.

Cloud round-trip is too slow. On-prem servers stay. The rest moves.

pain 04

Cloud bill exceeds what equivalent hardware would cost.

Steady-state workloads aren't right for pay-as-you-go. Sometimes on-prem is cheaper.

What you get

What we design + build.

  • 01

    Workload placement decisions

    Each system evaluated: cloud, on-prem, or both. Reasoned, documented, approved by stakeholders.

  • 02

    Site-to-cloud networking

    Express Route, AWS Direct Connect, or site-to-site VPN. Predictable latency, encrypted, monitored.

  • 03

    Hybrid identity

    Entra ID + on-prem AD synced. Single sign-on works across both worlds. Conditional access spans both.

  • 04

    Data flow + replication

    Some data lives in both worlds. Replication direction, conflict resolution, and backup all designed.

  • 05

    Failover scenarios

    What happens when one side goes down. Tested annually. Documented runbook.

  • 06

    Multi-cloud where it makes sense

    When AWS + Azure together beats either alone — usually for resilience or pricing leverage.

The journey

How we design a hybrid setup.

Phase 01 · Weeks 1–2

Workload audit

Every system mapped: latency needs, data sovereignty, integrations, cost. Workload placement matrix produced.

Phase 02 · Week 3

Network design

How sites connect to cloud and to each other. Bandwidth, redundancy, failover paths.

Phase 03 · Week 4

Identity + security

Hybrid identity model. Single sign-on across boundaries. Conditional access for both worlds.

Phase 04 · Weeks 5–6

Pilot integration

One non-critical workload made hybrid. Tested under realistic load. Performance verified.

Phase 05 · Weeks 7–12

Production rollout

Remaining workloads placed per the design. Phased, tested, documented.

Phase 06 · Ongoing

Operate + tune

Monthly review of placement decisions. Some things move. Some stay. Designs aren't frozen.

Compare

Where each kind of workload belongs.

On-premCloudEither / both
Latency-sensitive (manufacturing, trading)YesRarely
Regulator-bound (medical PACS, gov data)OftenWhere allowed
Steady high-load DBCheaperEasierDepends on cost math
Bursty workloads (batch, ML training)WastefulYes
Email + collaborationRarelyYes (M365 / Workspace)
Web apps + APIsSometimesUsuallyYes — multi-cloud for resilience
Backup + DRSome copiesSome copiesBest to have both
Built on

Hybrid infrastructure components.

Cloud platforms
Microsoft Azure (Stack HCI for on-prem)AWS (Outposts for on-prem extension)Google Cloud Anthos
Connectivity
Azure ExpressRouteAWS Direct ConnectCloudflare TunnelSite-to-site IPsec VPN
On-prem hypervisors
VMware vSphereMicrosoft Hyper-VNutanix
Storage + replication
NetApp Cloud VolumesAzure NetApp FilesVeeam (cross-environment)
By the numbers

Hybrid scorecard.

99.95
%
Combined uptime

Across hybrid workloads in last 12 months.

<5
ms
On-prem to cloud latency

Average for clients on Direct Connect / ExpressRoute.

12
/yr
Failover drills

Tested monthly. Documented annually.

100
%
Workload placement documented

Why each system is where it is, reviewed quarterly.

From a client
We thought 'hybrid' meant we'd done cloud wrong. Senator convinced us it was the right architecture for our manufacturing setup, then helped us build it cleanly. Our MES stays on the floor, everything else lives in Azure. Best of both.
VP of IT · 180-person specialty manufacturer · Mississauga
Who needs this

Who needs this.

  • Manufacturing, healthcare, financial firms with on-prem requirements.
  • Firms with critical legacy software that can't move yet — but everything else can.
  • Multi-cloud firms running AWS + Azure together for resilience or pricing.
  • Acquirers integrating a target with a mix of on-prem and cloud assets.
FAQ
Q01

Is hybrid more expensive than pure cloud?

Sometimes, yes — you pay for both. But the right things on-prem can be much cheaper than equivalent cloud. We do the math per workload.

Q02

What about latency between sites?

With Direct Connect or ExpressRoute, single-digit milliseconds. Good enough for almost any application except real-time trading or specific industrial control.

Q03

Can we go pure-cloud later?

Yes — hybrid is often a transitional state. We design with that in mind, so workloads can shift cleanly when the constraint that kept them on-prem changes.

Q04

What's multi-cloud good for?

Three reasons: avoiding vendor lock-in, resilience against a single cloud's outage, and price leverage at renewal. Not always worth the complexity.

Next step

Free 90-min architecture review.

We'll look at what you've got, what you're trying to do, and tell you whether hybrid is the right shape — and what the design should look like.