
Embracing resilience in 2026
If 2025 was the wake-up call, 2026 will be the year to act with discipline. That starts with an honest dependency inventory: not just which clouds you use directly, but which clouds and regions sit beneath your SaaS, security, networking, and operations tools. From there, you can classify systems by business criticality and map appropriate resilience patterns to each class, reserving the most expensive mechanisms, such as cross-region active-active, for systems where downtime is truly existential.
Equally important is organizational change. Resilience is not only an architectural problem; it is an operations, finance, and governance problem. In 2026, the enterprises that succeed will be the ones that align architecture, site reliability engineering, security, and finance around a shared goal: reduce single points of failure in both technology and vendors, validate failover and recovery as rigorously as new features, and treat cloud dependence as a managed business risk rather than a hidden assumption. The cloud is not going away, nor should it, but our blind trust in any single piece of it must stop.

