The Cloud Paradox in Spain: Low Initial Adoption, but Companies That Dive In Are More Advanced Than the European Average

The Cloud Paradox in Spain: Low Initial Adoption, but Companies That Dive In Are More Advanced Than the European Average

The cloud adoption landscape in Spain presents a fascinating paradox: although Spanish SMEs are reluctant to take the first step in basic services, those that do end up using the technology more strategically and sophisticatedly than their European counterparts. This is revealed by the Cloud Nation 2026 Observatory, presented by Aire, which analyzes in depth the state of the cloud in the Spanish business fabric.

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Low Overall Adoption, but Superior Strategic Use

According to the report, Spain ranks 21st among European Union countries in overall use of paid cloud computing services, with a national adoption rate of 44%. When looking at tools considered basic, the country falls below the EU average. However, the situation changes dramatically when analyzing high-value strategic technology solutions. Spanish companies demonstrate a higher level of maturity than their neighbors: ERP application integration in the cloud reaches 47%, compared to the European average of 30%; CRM applications have a penetration of 41.7% versus 28% in the EU; hiring computing power for proprietary software reaches 33% (EU average: 25%); and platforms for application development reach nearly 31% compared to 26% in Europe.

Aire's View: Two Speeds Explain the Paradox

For Santi Magazù, General Director of Cloud and Cyber at Aire, this apparent inconsistency is due to the gap between SMEs and large corporations, as well as sectoral and territorial differences. "What is happening in Spain is that there is a big difference in the level of adoption across three dimensions: sector, territory, and size," he explains. Sectors like ICT adopt much more; Catalonia and Madrid exceed the European average, while the rest of the regions are below; and large companies advance rapidly, while SMEs lag behind. "This gives you the paradox: those who adopt go all in, and those who don't adopt do almost nothing," Magazù summarizes.

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Talent: The Main Barrier, Not Cost

The Cloud Nation 2026 Observatory identifies talent as the main barrier to cloud adoption in Spain, above cost. Magazù points out that "the speed of training and developing profiles, even junior ones, is failing." Vocational training and universities must be strengthened, but also "people's appetite for training in technological topics." This bottleneck affects the entire chain: "It is not easy to find trained profiles. Hence, training programs allow us to find people to train and develop talent," he adds.

Democratizing Cloud Access: The Role of Providers

For Magazù, democratizing cloud among SMEs falls on providers, who must "make products that are easy to use" and offer proximity. He cites managed services (MSP) as an example, which allow SMEs to access advanced cybersecurity and regulatory compliance capabilities at reasonable costs. "There is a point in the provider's offering: it must offer a cloud offering adapted to the SME in technology, price, how it delivers the service, and how it accompanies an SME to implement and manage it," he explains.

Risk of Internal Digital Fracture

The two-speed Spain poses a real risk of digital fracture. Magazù compares it to the arrival of broadband: "In the end, it is now normal to go to any town and there is fiber. 10 years ago, no." Fortunately, Spain's network infrastructure is excellent, so the problem is not technical but one of service and customer proximity. Additionally, data sovereignty (European, Spanish, or even regional) adds a layer of complexity that requires providers to be physically close to the customer.

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How to Close the Gap: Real Use Cases

To prevent the gap between SMEs and large corporations from widening, Magazù bets on "real and specific success use cases." At Aire, they look for pragmatic examples of how cloud or AI help solve concrete problems, and they socialize them within each sector and segment. "Don't launch abstract messages," he concludes.

This analysis aligns with other industry trends, such as Google's DiffusionGemma parallel text generation or digital sovereignty in code models like Cohere's. The fragmentation of the Spanish market demands tailored solutions, such as those proposed by Magellan with its comprehensive ecosystem.


Original source: ComputerWorld. Analysis and adaptation by ForgeNEX.

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