Michael Hickins | Senior Writer | May 14, 2025
Companies adopt industry clouds to help manage every aspect of their businesses more effectively, including inventory management in retail, clinical care in healthcare, project management in construction, and anti–money laundering in banking. This article will define what industry clouds are, how they work, and the benefits and challenges of using them.
Industry clouds generally refer to a collection of integrated IT assets tailored for specific industries and embedded with data analytics, AI, and other emerging technologies. They comprise industry-specific cloud application suites built on standards-based cloud infrastructure, integrated with finance, supply chain, HR, and other horizontal applications.
Key Takeaways
Industry clouds let organizations run both industry-specific and horizontal business applications on a single platform. Data generated by one application on the platform can be easily shared with data on other applications for analytic purposes.
For example, patient data in a hospital management application can be shared with a supply chain application to help ensure that the hospital is properly stocked with enough face masks, alcohol swabs, and syringes. Relevant data can be exposed to various applications as needed while maintaining appropriate security controls, including those mandated by government regulations and industry standards.
Industry clouds represent an important evolution of the cloud computing model because they let businesses run critical enterprise applications, including those developed by different vendors, more efficiently than if they had to run them on separate clouds. These applications run the gamut from general-purpose finance, supply chain, HR, marketing, and customer services to core banking, healthcare, retail, construction, and other industry-specific applications as well as point solutions and bespoke software developed in-house.
Because they’re on a single platform, they inherit the security practices and other tooling (such as AI capabilities) of that platform, and the applications can work more cohesively together, removing from the equation the need to manage the extraction, cleansing, and refactoring of data that’s necessary when applications run in different environments.
Industry cloud platforms are an amalgam of cloud applications that have been developed to address the needs and pain points of a specific industry. They also include general-purpose applications and custom-built applications, all on a scalable cloud infrastructure that can embed a range of AI, data analytics, and other capabilities as well as advanced security controls. The integration of those applications and the data they generate lets user organizations run basic analytics or more sophisticated AI programs more easily than if the applications or databases were on disparate clouds. Industry clouds can accommodate applications from multiple vendors.
Businesses can use industry clouds (or industry suites, as some vendors refer to them) to assemble the applications and analytic capabilities they need to compete in their industries while also addressing the regulatory and security requirements specific to their industries. Industry clouds also include tooling such as analytics, AI, and other emerging technology capabilities embedded within the cloud infrastructure, which helps business leaders make decisions in real time, as opposed to after the fact.
Organizations rely on industry clouds to compete effectively in their markets. In contrast to all-purpose cloud infrastructure and applications, industry cloud suites are built to reflect the competitive and regulatory contexts specific to a given industry while helping reduce complexity and costs and improving security and regulatory compliance. What follows are more details on the main potential benefits of industry clouds.
Industry clouds give businesses access to applications that are tailored for their respective industries as well as analytic tools and others embedded within the cloud infrastructure that can help them make more timely and efficient use of data. Check out some examples below.
Industry clouds create a single set of applications and scalable infrastructure that’s tailored for each company’s industry and helps them address regulatory and other governance strictures. By the same token, industry clouds can represent a single point of failure if they aren’t properly configured or if the vendor is inexperienced in a given industry. Businesses should consider the following challenges when selecting an industry cloud vendor.
We expect that industry clouds will increasingly embed within their architectures capabilities made possible by emerging technologies, such as virtual reality, and, yes, AI. For example, construction companies will use generative AI to automate their responses to the many questions in RFPs, and they’ll use a combination of GenAI and VR to produce—in hours, not days or weeks—written proposals and visual plans for new projects. In healthcare, organizations will be able to use the analytic capabilities of embedded AI to comb through reams of patient records to better understand the underlying causes of hospital readmissions and address issues holistically rather than whacking mole after mole. In the financial sector, AI embedded in industry cloud services will help salespeople identify prospects for their investment products, ones who might otherwise go unnoticed using conventional demographic analysis. Such “pervasive AI” also frees organizations from having to design their own large language models and recruit expert staff.
Oracle industry suites go beyond conventional industry clouds, combining applications tailored for more than a dozen industries; built-in AI; integration with finance, HR, supply chain, marketing, and other general-purpose applications; and running on secure, scalable, and highly performant cloud infrastructure. One industry’s breakthrough can become the new standard for all other industries. With Oracle industry suites, Oracle brings those breakthroughs to every industry it serves, raising the bar on what’s possible.
What’s the difference between cloud computing and industry cloud?
Cloud computing is a shared resource that lets businesses benefit from economies of scale generated by using the same set of computing infrastructure and applications, for which they pay fees in proportion to their usage. Industry cloud refers to cloud infrastructure and applications designed for a given industry, such as anti–money laundering capabilities in banking or electronic health record capabilities in healthcare.
What’s industry cloud strategy?
Industry cloud strategy seeks to maximize the benefits of cloud computing as applied to a given industry, letting businesses take advantage of industry best practices while benefiting from the built-in security and economies of scale created by using shared computing resources.