Legacy Modernization

Technical debt accounts for 20 to 40 percent of the entire technology estate at most enterprises. We help you turn that liability into a growth accelerator.

The Product-Led Approach to Technical Debt

Most organizations treat technical debt as an engineering problem. They modernize bottom-up: refactoring the oldest code first, upgrading databases by age, migrating services alphabetically. It is disciplined engineering, and it produces almost no customer value.

We take a different approach. Product-led modernization sequences the work around customer outcomes, competitive windows, and business model implications. The question shifts from “What is the most technically overdue?” to “What modernization unlocks the most value soonest?”

Code Migration

We plan and execute migrations from legacy codebases to modern architectures. Our approach prioritizes the components that block revenue-generating features first, not the ones that are simply the oldest.

  • Monolith-to-microservices decomposition
  • COBOL and mainframe migration planning
  • Cloud-native re-architecture
  • API-first modernization

Technical Debt Management

We help leadership teams build the business case for modernization, sequence work for maximum ROI, and present it as an investment rather than a cost center.

  • Technical debt audit and quantification
  • Product-led modernization roadmaps
  • Board-ready ROI narratives
  • Compliance and security remediation

Infrastructure Automation

Our team has designed automation platforms managing 200,000+ systems across global environments. We bring that experience to help organizations standardize, automate, and scale their infrastructure.

  • Infrastructure as Code implementation
  • Automated patching and lifecycle management
  • M&A infrastructure harmonization
  • DevOps transformation

Why Now

$57B

Projected legacy modernization market by 2030, up from $25B in 2025

20-40%

Of the entire technology estate is technical debt at most enterprises (McKinsey)

~50%

Of CIOs who expect to overspend on digital infrastructure blame excessive tech debt (IDC)