Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE) Cloud Infrastructure, Automation, and DevOps Engineering

Cloud Architecture and Design Patterns Training Course

World-class training infrastructure where global business meets desert innovation and ambition

10 Days Duration
In-Person Delivery
12 Dates Available
Certificate Included
None

Upcoming In-Person Schedules in Dubai

Reserve Your Spot Today — Pay When You're Ready!

Code Start Date End Date Duration Fee
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
CCD-03 Mon - Fri (10 Days) USD 7,800 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
Training Date
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10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
Training Date
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10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
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10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
Training Date
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10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
Training Date
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10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
Training Date
to
10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
Training Date
to
10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
Training Date
to
10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
Training Date
to
10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
Training Date
to
10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
Training Date
to
10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03
Training Date
to
10 Days
USD 7,800
CCD-03

Here's What You'll Learn

Each module tackles real challenges you face in your role

1

Fundamentals of Cloud Architecture

2

Cloud Design Patterns Overview

3

Building Scalable Architectures

4

Microservices and Containerization

5

Serverless Architecture

6

Cloud Security and Compliance

7

Multi-Cloud and Hybrid Cloud Strategies

8

DevOps and Cloud Integration

9

Performance Optimization and Cost Management

Market-specific guidance for Mali

A country-aware view of the pressures, proof points, and practical tools that shape how this course applies locally.

Why this course matters in Mali

Strategic context for the risks, opportunities, and capability gaps this training addresses locally.

Cloud architecture training matters in Mali because organisations that are digitising core services need systems that can stay available, secure, and economical as demand grows and infrastructure changes. It is especially relevant for technology, banking, telecom, government, and fast-growing services teams that must decide how to modernise applications without creating outages or security gaps. The course helps leaders choose architecture patterns, governance controls, and deployment approaches that reduce operational risk while improving speed to deliver new services.

Reliability under constrained infrastructure

In Mali, cloud designs need to tolerate intermittent connectivity, regional latency, and uneven on-premise maturity, so patterns for retries, queueing, and graceful degradation are especially valuable.

Security by design is not optional

Cloud adoption increases the need to build identity, access control, monitoring, and workload isolation into the architecture from the start rather than adding them after deployment.

Modernisation without large rewrites

Many organisations can use incremental migration patterns to move legacy systems into the cloud in stages, which reduces risk and lets teams prove value before larger platform changes.

This training is timely because cloud adoption is pushing organisations to improve resilience, governance, and cost control at the same time. In a market where digital services must scale without overbuilding infrastructure, architecture skills help teams avoid outages, security exposure, and costly redesigns.

Tools and platforms relevant to this field

3

Field-relevant examples that may be featured in training where they support the confirmed scope. Exact coverage depends on participant needs and delivery format.

  • Microsoft Azure Architecture Center Microsoft
    Used by architects to select cloud design patterns for resilience, security, and performance when planning Azure-based solutions.
  • Amazon Web Services Amazon
    Used for building and operating scalable cloud systems that rely on managed services, elastic capacity, and reference architectures.
  • Terraform HashiCorp
    Used to define infrastructure as code so cloud environments can be reproduced, reviewed, and changed consistently.

Training visit intelligence for Dubai

Practical notes for confirmed delegates: arrival, venue expectations, after-class options, and on-the-ground considerations.

Optional after-class stops

8
leisure
Burj Khalifa

The world's tallest building at 829.8 m, with observation decks on the 124th, 125th, and 148th floors offering panoramic views of the city, coastline, and desert.

Learn more
heritage
Al Fahidi Historical Neighbourhood

One of Dubai's oldest districts featuring traditional wind-tower architecture, art galleries, and cultural exhibits that showcase the city's pre-oil heritage.

culture
Dubai Frame

A 150-metre-tall architectural landmark in Zabeel Park with a sky-high glass bridge offering 360-degree views of both old and new Dubai.

culture
Museum of the Future

An immersive exhibition space blending technology and art to explore future innovations, housed in a striking torus-shaped building on Sheikh Zayed Road.

heritage
Dubai Creek

The historic saltwater inlet that was the lifeblood of old Dubai; cross by traditional abra water taxi for just AED 1 and explore the Gold Souk and Spice Souk on either bank.

nature
Dubai Miracle Garden

A seasonal outdoor garden featuring over 150 million flowers arranged in elaborate displays, open roughly from October to April.

Learn more
culture
Dubai Opera

A dhow-shaped performing arts venue in Downtown Dubai hosting opera, ballet, theatre, and concerts since its 2016 opening.

leisure
Palm Jumeirah

The iconic palm-shaped artificial island featuring luxury resorts, beachfront dining, and The View observation deck at 240 metres on level 52 of Palm Tower.

Local demand signals 5

Sector-level context showing where this capability is relevant in Dubai.

01

Financial Services & Fintech

DIFC is the Middle East's premier financial hub operating under its own English common-law framework, hosting banks, asset managers, insurers, and fintech startups. Delegates in governance, risk, or compliance training benefit from proximity to regulated financial institutions.

02

Technology & ICT

Dubai Internet City is the MENA region's largest ICT business park, while Dubai Silicon Oasis serves as an integrated tech park with incubator programmes. Both clusters attract global technology firms and startups relevant to IT and cybersecurity training.

03

Commodities Trading & Logistics

DMCC hosts over 21,000 registered companies and is a global hub for gold, diamonds, and tea trading. JAFZA, adjacent to Jebel Ali Port, is a major logistics and manufacturing free zone, making Dubai a key node in global supply chains.

04

Aviation & Freight Logistics

Dubai International Airport is one of the world's busiest international hubs, and DAFZA supports over 1,600 companies in aviation, freight, IT, and pharmaceuticals adjacent to the airport.

05

Media & Creative Industries

Dubai Media City is a dedicated free zone for media production, broadcasting, and publishing, while d3 focuses on design, fashion, and creative arts — both operated under TECOM Group's creative cluster framework.

Training venue

Dubai offers an extensive range of 4- and 5-star hotels and purpose-built conference centres, many with dedicated training and meeting rooms equipped with modern AV technology. Business districts such as Downtown Dubai, DIFC, and Dubai Internet City are well served by hotels accustomed to hosting corporate training events.

Getting there

No direct flights from Bamako (BKO) to Dubai International Airport (DXB); primary connections are via Addis Ababa on Ethiopian Airlines or Istanbul on Turkish Airlines, with total journey times typically ranging from 12 to 15 hours.

Visa

Mali passport holders need a pre-arranged UAE visa before traveling to Dubai; one travel-visa source says Mali citizens must apply in advance and lists Dubai tourist visas of 14, 30, or 90 days, with a 90-day single-entry visa quoted at USD 450 and typical processing of 3–4 days.

Safety

Dubai is generally very safe for visitors, with low crime rates. Delegates should observe local laws on public decency and dress modestly in non-resort areas; alcohol is only permitted in licensed venues, and public intoxication can result in penalties.

Internet

Reliability: good

Weather year-round

  • Apr 34/23°C Warm and increasingly hot; marks the onset of summer. Rain is rare. Air-conditioned venues essential.
  • Jan 25/14°C Mild and pleasant — Dubai's coolest month. Ideal for outdoor activities; occasional brief showers possible.
  • Jul 41/31°C Peak summer — extremely hot with high humidity. Outdoor exposure should be minimised; all venues are air-conditioned.
  • Oct 36/25°C Transitioning from summer heat; still hot but gradually cooling. Humidity begins to ease.

Real Results from Real Professionals

Thousands of professionals have transformed their careers through our training programs. Now, it's your turn.

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Barbours
Bank of Rwanda
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Dahabshil Bank
Dorcas Aid
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Ministry of Education Saudi Arabia
NSSF Uganda
RBA
Reserve Bank of Malawi
WASREB Kenya
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