The following is a guest article by Kelly Goolsby from Nexcess
If you run a healthcare practice or health platform, your infrastructure is likely overdue for an honest evaluation. It’s not cracked or broken; it’s just that it kept chugging along while the technology and regulatory environment evolved around it. Ultimately, you will need to migrate. The choice is whether you do it on your own terms or wait until an emergency forces your hand.
Let’s look at what a planned migration actually takes, and how to execute it smoothly.
Establish Your Baseline
Before drawing up a migration plan, you need a clear inventory of your current setup. What software versions are you running? Which ones are still actively supported by vendors? What hasn’t been audited in the last year? While these questions seem basic, most practices can only answer them partially. This isn’t due to negligence; it’s simply because quiet, working systems rarely demand attention.
However, risk quietly accumulates in the gap between a system that is merely running and one that is actively maintained. Knowing exactly what is in your environment, as well as its forward lifecycle, is what transforms a migration from a chaotic emergency into a predictable project.
Planned vs. Forced Migrations
Migrations have a bad reputation, but it’s largely undeserved. While concerns about downtime, cost, and operational continuity are valid, they are entirely manageable if you address them upfront.
Take downtime, for example. A well-executed migration runs the old and new environments concurrently. This means any eventual cutover downtime is minimal, scheduled, and communicated well in advance so there are no surprises for your staff or patients.
Cost is another major factor, but inertia carries its own financial risks. Staying put leaves you exposed to compliance penalties on unsupported systems, broken integrations, and compounding technical debt that makes future upgrades even harder. With a planned migration, expenses are predictable; with a forced migration, they rarely are.
Finally, maintaining operational continuity comes down to clear documentation. When you map out the process before turning anything off, your internal team and your migration partner know exactly who handles what. The anxiety surrounding migrations usually stems from a lack of planning, and clear documentation completely eliminates that uncertainty.
Build a Forward-Looking Roadmap
An effective migration roadmap goes beyond a basic upgrade list. It should be a strategic document that you can confidently present to a CFO or compliance officer. It needs to be broken into distinct phases with realistic timelines, accounting for future growth like new locations, incoming integrations, and shifting compliance standards.
Successful healthcare practices treat infrastructure upgrades like any other major business initiative, ensuring clear milestones, assigned budgets, and a defined parallel-running period to guarantee a seamless handoff.
Before signing with a technology partner, ask them to walk you through their methodology in detail. Find out exactly how they handle concurrent environments, how they communicate downtime, and what their escalation path looks like when unexpected issues arise. Vague answers at this stage are a major red flag.
Maintaining Momentum Post-Migration
Reaching a modern, supported infrastructure is a great milestone, but the work doesn’t stop there.
In healthcare, patch management must be a continuous process, not a reactive fix. Your BAAs, patch histories, and access logs should always be organized and accessible before an auditor requests them. That way, when the next major security vulnerability is announced, the systems powering your patient portals, revenue cycle management (RCM) platforms, and scheduling tools are already protected.
Ultimately, infrastructure management isn’t about setting it and forgetting it; it’s about eliminating the element of surprise.
Kelly Goolsby is with Nexcess, a managed hosting platform that provides HIPAA-compliant infrastructure and migration support for specialty practices, regional health centers, and healthcare SaaS platforms.
Ready to build your migration roadmap? Let’s talk.