Modernize Infrastructure Faster with Google Cloud RaMP
Delivering Cloud Migration with Precision and Scale
The Engine Room of Every Successful RaMP Migration
Workload Discovery and Analysis
Cost and Readiness Evaluation
Secure Landing Zone Design
Structured Migration Execution
Modernization Planning
Continuous Performance Optimization
Strategic Advantages of Google Cloud RaMP
Faster Cloud Migration
Expert-Led Guidance
Funding and Incentives
Low-Risk, High-Impact
Scalable and Secure Infrastructure
Post-Migration Optimization
Enterprise Solutions Backed by Google Cloud RaMP
- Cloud Assessment & Strategy
- Cloud Migration
- Cloud Security
- Cloud Infrastructure
- Application Modernization
Exclusive Advantages for RaMP Program Clients
Free Assessment
Discounted Migration Support
Post-Migration Optimization
Free PoCs (proof of concept)
Key Features for a Seamless Google Cloud Migration
End-to-End Migration Support
Google-Funded Incentives
Cloud Readiness Assessment
Customized Migration Strategy
Proof of Concept (PoC) Execution
Modern Architecture Design
FAQ
RaMP stands for Rapid Migration and Modernization Program. It’s basically Google Cloud’s step-by-step way to move workloads from on-prem or other clouds into their platform. You start with an assessment, add the right tools for the job, and in some cases, there’s funding help too. The idea is to make the shift faster and avoid the usual migration headaches.
Not every business qualifies. Google checks this early on during the assessment. That’s when they look at what workloads you’re moving to, how ready you are, and the timelines you’re working with.
There’s no single answer here. A light workload can be wrapped up in a few weeks. Big, complex enterprise projects? Those might run for several months.
There’s no single tool for every job. For some workloads, it might be the Migration Center. Others could use Migrate to VMs, Migrate to Containers, Database Migration Service, or even Google Cloud VMware Engine. The team picks what fits best after looking at your setup and goals.
Yes, and it’s worth doing. After the move, workloads can be tuned for cost, performance, or scale. That might mean containerizing apps, upgrading databases, or tweaking the architecture so it grows with your business.