“We’re moving to the cloud” has been the plan for a lot of Southwest Florida businesses since 2020. But in 2026, many still have a server room humming in the back office, running software that belongs in a data center — not an office building that floods every August.
If you’ve been putting off cloud migration, here’s what you need to know to actually make it happen this year.
What Does “Moving to the Cloud” Actually Mean?
Cloud migration isn’t one thing — it’s a spectrum. For most SWFL small businesses, it looks like one of these:
- SaaS replacement: Swapping on-premise software (like QuickBooks Desktop or a local file server) for cloud apps (QuickBooks Online, SharePoint/OneDrive, Google Workspace)
- Infrastructure migration: Moving servers to Azure, AWS, or Google Cloud so you’re no longer maintaining physical hardware
- Hybrid approach: Keeping some things on-prem (manufacturing machines, specialized software, security cameras) while moving everything else to cloud
Most small businesses under 50 employees should be targeting a near-full SaaS + cloud storage model. Physical servers are a liability in hurricane country.
The Real Costs of Cloud Migration
The number one reason businesses delay: they don’t know what it will cost. Here’s a realistic breakdown:
- Migration labor: Plan for 20–80 hours of IT work depending on complexity
- Monthly cloud spend: Microsoft 365 Business Premium is ~$26/user/month. Azure IaaS varies widely.
- Training time: Budget 4–8 hours per employee for major platform changes
- One-time data transfer: Moving large archives (especially in professional services or healthcare) can take time and bandwidth
The comparison isn’t cloud vs. free — it’s cloud vs. the true cost of your on-prem setup: server hardware replacement every 5 years, IT maintenance labor, power, cooling, and your own risk exposure.
Common Mistakes SWFL Businesses Make During Cloud Migration
- Migrating everything at once. Lift-and-shift rarely works. Start with the lowest-risk systems and build confidence.
- Not testing before cutting over. Run parallel for at least 2 weeks for any business-critical system.
- Forgetting compliance requirements. Healthcare businesses (HIPAA), financial firms, and legal practices have specific requirements about where data can live.
- Assuming Microsoft 365 is a backup. It’s not. M365 has retention policies, not backups. You still need a third-party BDR solution.
- Skipping user training. The #1 cause of failed cloud migrations is user resistance because nobody showed them how to work differently.
What’s the Right Cloud Platform for Your Business?
For most SWFL businesses, Microsoft 365 + Azure is the right stack because of:
- Deep integration with Windows and Office apps your team already uses
- HIPAA-eligible services for healthcare organizations in Naples and Fort Myers
- Microsoft’s physical data centers in the US (important for compliance)
- Azure Virtual Desktop for businesses that need to run legacy Windows apps remotely
Google Workspace is a good fit for businesses that live in Gmail and want simplicity. It’s not ideal if you have compliance requirements or run Windows-heavy workloads.
How Long Does a Cloud Migration Take?
For a typical SWFL professional services firm (10–30 employees):
- Email + file migration to M365: 2–4 weeks
- Line-of-business app move to cloud/SaaS: 4–12 weeks per application
- Full server decommission: 3–6 months total
This isn’t a weekend project. But it’s also not as scary as it sounds with the right partner guiding the process.
SWFIT handles cloud migrations for businesses across Collier, Lee, and Sarasota counties. We assess your current setup, build a phased migration plan, and manage the cutover so your team barely notices the switch.