Industries and operating context
Industry work starts with the pressure on the system.
Sector knowledge matters when it changes architecture, controls, workflows, data responsibilities, and the way technology is operated.

Operating pressure matrix
Twelve sectors, grouped by the systems they must protect and change.
Regulated operations
Protect sensitive data, trace decisions, and modernize without weakening control.
1.1HealthcareDeliver patient-centric care and streamline clinical operations using compliant, secure, and modern digital healthcare solutions.1.2FinanceEmpower financial institutions with secure, high-performance cloud architectures, real-time analytics, and automated compliance.1.3InsuranceAutomate claims processing, optimize underwriting risks, and secure policy databases with modern data architectures.
Connected supply networks
Connect physical operations, planning, quality, and movement across complex networks.
2.1ManufacturingOptimize supply chains, predict machine failures, and automate quality checks with connected industrial operations technology.2.2EnergyMonitor grid operations, predict equipment failures, and secure utility databases from external cyber threats.2.3TransportationTrack fleet operations, optimize shipping paths, and secure passenger check-in applications.2.4LogisticsAutomate warehouse inventory scans, coordinate freight routes, and scale dispatch database systems.2.5ConstructionCoordinate project schedules, automate field site reporting, and secure operational blueprints.
Public systems
Improve access, security, and service continuity across institutions and communities.
Customer platforms
Scale digital service, personalization, and network reliability across high-volume channels.
Shared foundations
Different sectors still depend on connected technical responsibilities.
Identity, integration, data quality, observability, security, and release discipline cross industry boundaries. The implementation changes with the operating context.
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