Application modernization goes far beyond simply migrating servers to the cloud; it’s a comprehensive transformation that demands strategic vision, technical expertise, and agile organization.
To accelerate time-to-market, reduce technical debt, and foster innovation, you need to bring together complementary skill sets within an autonomous team. From the executive sponsor driving the roadmap to the Product Owner prioritizing business value, through the modernization architect and legacy application experts, each role is crucial. This article outlines the essential positions and methodologies to adopt for a successful transition to a cloud-native microservices architecture.
Strategic Leadership and Governance
A modernization project without an engaged executive sponsor lacks visibility and resources. Clear governance ensures alignment between business strategy and the IT timeline.
At a large Swiss financial institution, the absence of a clearly identified executive sponsor led to conflicting decisions between the IT department and business units. Once a newly appointed CTO was vested with budgetary and strategic responsibilities, the project gained prioritization, governance became structured, and rapid decisions unlocked key resources.
Executive Sponsor
The executive sponsor champions modernization at the highest level of the organization. They approve the budget, arbitrate between competing priorities, and ensure the project serves the company’s overarching vision. To guide the initial phase, refer to our Digital Roadmap Guide in 4 Key Steps.
Without their active support, modernization often suffers from repeated delays, resource shortages, and conflicts between the IT department and business stakeholders. Their role is to keep the project visible in executive committees and remove organizational obstacles.
They must also monitor key indicators—such as the functional decoupling rate and reduction of technical debt—to demonstrate business impact and secure the necessary commitments.
Product Owner
The Product Owner translates business requirements into user stories and defines modernization priorities. They assess the added value of each microservice and ensure the team delivers features aligned with commercial objectives. To structure requirements, see our Guide to Documenting Agile User Stories for User-Centric Development.
By maintaining focus on business impact, they ensure each iteration delivers tangible return on investment. They work closely with the architect to balance value and technical complexity.
Their ongoing prioritization manages risks associated with incremental integration and ensures transformations do not disrupt daily operations.
Project Manager
The Project Manager coordinates schedules, manages resources, and oversees risks. In a multi-microservice context, they ensure dependencies between teams are identified and synchronized.
They implement appropriate agile rituals, mastering story mapping, and create dashboards to track progress, costs, and delivery performance.
Their vigilance over deliverable quality and adherence to deadlines is essential to avoid cumulative delays and ensure controlled scaling.
Architecture and Technical Knowledge Transfer
Refactoring a monolith into microservices requires close collaboration between the modernization architect and the legacy application expert. Success hinges on a scalable, secure, cloud-native target architecture.
A Swiss industrial SME, inheritor of historic commercial software, relied on a dedicated architect who mapped critical workflows with an internal application expert. Through this co-design approach, the first services were isolated without service interruption while ensuring data consistency and process integrity.
Modernization Architect
The architect defines the cloud-native target architecture and designs the microservices decomposition. They establish standards and patterns, ensure interface consistency, and manage technical dependencies. For more information, see our IT Solutions Architect Role: Responsibilities, Key Skills, and Certifications.
By choosing open-source, modular technologies with no proprietary lock-in, they prevent vendor lock-in and facilitate future evolution. They also propose a containerization and automated deployment strategy.
Their role is to anticipate scaling scenarios, guarantee security, and validate compliance with regulatory requirements, all while ensuring the platform’s scalability.
Legacy Application Expert
The legacy application expert understands the historic business logic, data flows, and hidden dependencies within the monolith. They identify critical areas and guide the functional decomposition to avoid regressions.
They document use cases, workarounds, and technological specifics, providing an accurate reference for the modernization team. Read more in the article Legacy IT Systems: When and How to Modernize.
Their contribution is crucial to minimize risks: without this detailed mapping, process migration can lead to calculation errors, data loss, or service interruptions.
Cloud-Native Design
Cloud-native design involves containerizing services, orchestrating them via Kubernetes or managed platforms, and integrating stateless APIs. It ensures automatic horizontal scalability and enhanced resilience. See our resource on High Availability in Public Cloud: Designing a Resilient Architecture for Azure, AWS, GCP, and Infomaniak.
Serverless or function-based architectures can complement the platform for asynchronous processing, reducing costs and simplifying maintenance.
By adopting security by design principles, encryption, strong authentication, and fine-grained access control are integrated for each microservice.
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Development, Quality, and Automation
Skilled senior developers and an automated testing strategy ensure the robustness of new microservices. Automation reduces errors and accelerates deployments.
At a large university hospital in French-speaking Switzerland, introducing a CI/CD pipeline increased deployments from two to ten per month while maintaining 85% test coverage. The reduction in production incidents significantly improved the availability of clinical applications.
Senior Developers and DevOps
Senior developers master the backend (APIs, databases) and the frontend. They are familiar with cloud platforms and DevOps practices, capable of managing the entire microservice lifecycle.
They handle containerization, set up continuous integration scripts, and monitor production. Their autonomy enables rapid delivery of stable releases.
Their expertise is vital for implementing resilience patterns such as retry, circuit breaker, or bulkhead, and for maintaining clean, modular code.
QA / Test Engineer
The QA/Test Engineer establishes the strategy for unit, integration, and regression testing. In a distributed architecture, they ensure service contracts are tested and load scenarios are simulated.
They design automated test scenarios and ensure traceability of defects. For more information, see our Software Testing Strategy. Every pull request is validated through these pipelines before merging to prevent regressions.
Their work increases confidence in deliveries, reduces production incidents, and plays a key role in the product team’s maturity.
Automation Tools and CI/CD Pipelines
CI/CD pipelines orchestrate builds, tests, container image creation, and deployments. They incorporate security scans and code audits to detect technical debt and vulnerabilities.
Tools such as GitLab CI, Jenkins, or GitHub Actions, paired with monitoring solutions (Prometheus, Grafana), automate continuous delivery and provide rapid feedback.
Automation frees teams from repetitive tasks, accelerates release cycles, and ensures system stability over time.
Methodologies and Domain-Based Decoupling
Conway’s Law dictates aligning team structure with the target architecture. Domain-Driven Design and the Strangler Fig Pattern facilitate gradual feature extraction.
A Swiss logistics provider reorganized its teams into “product” units responsible for specific business domains. Each team decoupled a functional area from the monolith, validating the decomposition and limiting the impact of changes.
Conway’s Law and Autonomous Team Organization
According to Conway’s Law, an organization that produces a monolithic system will have monolithic teams. Conversely, to achieve decoupled microservices, you must structure independent teams responsible for end-to-end service delivery.
These teams manage their backlog, deliverables, and deployments without relying on a central team. They improve delivery speed and responsiveness to business needs.
By ensuring asynchronous communication via APIs and event-driven mechanisms, you reduce bottlenecks and enable each team to scale at its own pace.
Domain-Driven Design and the Strangler Fig Pattern
Domain-Driven Design (DDD) identifies business domains and delineates bounded contexts that become independent microservices. Each context has its own data model and business rules.
The Strangler Fig Pattern enables progressively migrating functionality to new services while continuing to rely on the existing monolith. This approach minimizes risk and facilitates iterative validation.
At each step, you verify business consistency and performance before disabling the old code to ensure a smooth transition.
Mapping and Incremental Decomposition
Automated analysis of the monolith maps dependencies, data flows, and architectural technical debt using process mining.
With these tools, you can plan a realistic decomposition and identify quick wins, such as isolating an authentication component or the product catalog.
Incremental planning delivers business value quickly, measures the impact of decomposition, and adjusts strategy based on operational feedback.
Turn Your Application Modernization into a Competitive Advantage
Successful application modernization requires a multidisciplinary team structured around strong leadership, a cloud-native architecture, and autonomous teams. Collaboration among the executive sponsor, Product Owner, architect, and technical experts ensures controlled decomposition and secure scaling. Adopting CI/CD pipelines, a rigorous testing strategy, and DDD methodologies strengthens your platform’s robustness and agility.
Every project is unique: the approach must adapt to your context, legacy, and business goals. Our experts support Swiss companies in defining their modernization strategy from initial vision to execution, prioritizing open-source, scalable, and secure solutions.















