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Microsoft, despite major Azure outage, sees cloud revenues surge 26%

The news: Hours before its earnings release, Microsoft faced an unwelcome hiccup: a widespread Azure and 365 outage that disrupted websites, apps, and corporate systems globally.

  • The company attributed the problem to a configuration issue in its Azure Front Door service, which caused temporary timeouts and latencies.
  • Operations were restored later in the day, but the timing served as a reminder that the same infrastructure that drives record profits can also create high-stakes vulnerabilities.

But Microsoft’s earnings delivered a clear message: the company’s AI and cloud engine is running at full power. For the quarter ended September 30, revenues rose 18% YoY to $77.7 billion, topping Wall Street’s estimates.

  • Microsoft Cloud revenues surged 26% to $49.1 billion, fueled by a 40% jump in Azure and other cloud services.
  • Productivity and Business Processes rose 17%, while the personal computing segment grew 4%, showing resilience even in slower categories.

Zooming out: Amazon Web Services (AWS) suffered a major outage last week, knocking out access to thousands of major sites for much of the day. The disruptions illustrate how dependent the global internet has become on just a handful of cloud providers—a risk that grows every time one of them goes dark.

Meanwhile, OpenAI’s restructuring this week reduces Microsoft’s stake to 27% but gives both companies more freedom—OpenAI to pursue outside partners and funding, and Microsoft to chase artificial general intelligence (AGI) with or without its longtime ally.

Why it matters: Microsoft’s results confirm it remains the anchor of enterprise AI spending.

  • Azure’s continued acceleration (up 40% after a 39% surge last quarter) reaffirms corporate customers’ commitment to fully deploying AI tools.
  • Capex topped $30 billion for the quarter, yet operating margins held firm—a key signal for investors that Microsoft is fueling AI demand without eroding profitability. Copilot is now embedded across Office, GitHub, and Dynamics, turning productivity into recurring cloud revenues.

The outage, however, underscores the flip side of that success. When Azure stumbles, the ripple effects reach airlines, retailers, and financial systems. Microsoft’s growing centrality to digital infrastructure means any failure—no matter how brief—has consequences that extend well beyond its own customers.

What this means for marketers: Microsoft’s dominance in AI and cloud means the tools marketers rely on (from Copilot to LinkedIn and Azure-powered analytics) are only getting more capable and more deeply integrated.

  • The company’s success in monetizing AI demonstrates that enterprise-grade automation and intelligence will keep trickling down into everyday marketing workflows, making personalization and productivity gains far more scalable.
  • But reliance cuts both ways. As Microsoft becomes the digital backbone for business, even brief outages can disrupt campaign operations, CRM systems, and performance tracking. Marketers should treat resilience the same way they treat reach—by diversifying their tech stacks and ensuring redundancy across platforms.

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