Why Cloud Assessment Precedes Migration
Cloud assessment is the critical first step that determines whether your migration succeeds or becomes an expensive lesson in poor planning. Organizations that skip formal assessment face 2-3x higher migration costs and significantly longer timelines, according to Gartner research.
A proper assessment evaluates your current infrastructure, applications, data, and business processes to create a detailed migration roadmap. It answers three essential questions: what should move, how should it move, and in what order.
What a Cloud Assessment Covers
A comprehensive cloud assessment examines five dimensions: infrastructure inventory, application dependencies, data classification, security posture, and total cost of ownership.
Infrastructure Inventory
Catalog every server, database, storage system, and network component. Automated discovery tools like AWS Migration Hub or Azure Migrate scan your environment and map resource utilization patterns over 30-60 days.
Application Dependencies
Map how applications communicate with each other, databases, and external services. Tightly coupled applications often need to migrate together, while loosely coupled services offer more flexibility in scheduling.
Data Classification
Classify data by sensitivity, regulatory requirements, and residency restrictions. Data subject to GDPR, HIPAA, or industry-specific regulations may require specific cloud regions or additional security controls.
Security and Compliance Posture
Evaluate current security controls and identify gaps that must be addressed before or during migration. Cloud environments require different security approaches than on-premises data centers. Our guide to cloud compliance and regulatory requirements covers this in detail.
Total Cost of Ownership
Calculate the full cost of running each workload on-premises versus in the cloud. Include hardware refresh cycles, staffing, facilities, licensing, and opportunity costs. This analysis often reveals that 30-50% of workloads see immediate cost savings from migration.
Cloud Assessment Frameworks Compared
The three major cloud providers each offer structured assessment frameworks, and choosing the right one depends on your target platform.
| Framework | Provider | Key Components | Best For |
| Cloud Adoption Framework | AWS | Business, People, Governance, Platform, Security, Operations | AWS-first migrations |
| Cloud Adoption Framework | Microsoft | Strategy, Plan, Ready, Adopt, Govern, Manage | Microsoft ecosystem |
| Cloud Adoption Framework | Google | Learn, Lead, Scale, Secure | Data-heavy workloads |
Migration Planning After Assessment
Assessment findings directly inform your migration plan, including wave groupings, timeline, resource requirements, and risk mitigation strategies.
Group applications into migration waves based on complexity, dependencies, and business criticality. Start with low-risk, independent applications in Wave 1 to build team confidence and refine processes. Reserve complex, mission-critical applications for later waves.
- Wave-by-wave application groupings with dependencies mapped
- Target architecture for each workload (IaaS, PaaS, SaaS, or containers)
- Data migration approach and timeline for each dataset
- Testing and validation criteria for each application
- Rollback procedures and success metrics
Common Assessment Findings
Most assessments reveal that 20-30% of applications can be retired or consolidated, immediately reducing migration scope and long-term costs.
Other common findings include legacy applications on unsupported operating systems, database licensing models that become expensive in the cloud, compliance gaps requiring new controls, and network bandwidth limitations for data transfer. Learn more about specific cloud assessment services and how they streamline the evaluation process.
How Opsio Conducts Cloud Assessments
Opsio's assessment methodology combines automated discovery tools with expert analysis to deliver actionable migration roadmaps in 2-4 weeks.
Our certified cloud architects evaluate your environment across all five assessment dimensions, then produce a prioritized migration plan with cost projections, timeline estimates, and risk assessments for each workload. We support assessments for cloud app migration across AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud.
Every assessment includes a detailed TCO comparison showing projected 3-year costs for on-premises versus cloud deployment. Contact our team to schedule your free cloud readiness assessment.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a cloud assessment?
A cloud assessment evaluates your current IT infrastructure, applications, and workloads to determine their readiness for cloud migration. It identifies dependencies, compliance requirements, cost implications, and the optimal migration strategy for each workload.
How long does a cloud assessment take?
A cloud assessment typically takes 2 to 6 weeks depending on the size of your infrastructure. Small environments with under 50 applications can be assessed in 2 weeks, while enterprise portfolios with hundreds of applications require 4 to 6 weeks.
What is the difference between assessment and migration?
Cloud assessment is the evaluation phase that analyzes your current environment and creates a migration roadmap. Cloud migration is the execution phase where workloads are actually moved to the cloud. Assessment should always precede migration to reduce risk and cost.
How much does a cloud assessment cost?
Cloud assessment costs range from $5,000 for small business evaluations to $50,000 or more for enterprise-wide assessments. Many managed service providers like Opsio include assessment as part of their migration engagement.
What tools are used for cloud assessment?
Common cloud assessment tools include AWS Migration Hub, Azure Migrate, Google Cloud Migrate, CloudSphere, and Turbonomic. These tools automate discovery of applications, dependencies, and resource utilization patterns.
Editorial standards: This article was written by a certified practitioner and peer-reviewed by our engineering team. We update content quarterly to ensure technical accuracy. Opsio maintains editorial independence — we recommend solutions based on technical merit, not commercial relationships.