Moving to a more flexible and secure cloud application offers enormous cost, efficiency, and security benefits for companies running their businesses on on-premises ERP systems. For existing Dynamics AX 2009 and AX 2012 organizations, migration to Dynamics 365 Finance and Operations is especially crucial since both applications have reached the end of mainstream support.
If you want to ensure a successful migration and avoid unnecessary pitfalls, this white paper will provide information and tips for migrating your legacy AX 2009/20212 system to the Dynamics 365 cloud. It will incorporate Synoptek’s experience in reusing/preserving/modifying existing customizations, data mapping and migration, the new development platform, LCS, and other project concerns.
This white paper will provide insights on:
A Managed Experience Provider (MxPTM) redefines enterprise visibility by shifting the focus from misleading uptime metrics to actionable human productivity insights. By leveraging AI-powered IT operations (aiXopsTM) to correlate technical reliability with real-time user sentiment, this experience-led IT strategy identifies “productivity leaks” and digital friction that traditional SLAs often ignore. Through AI-driven managed services and the implementation of Experience Level Agreements (XLAs), organizations can finally solve the “70% problem” of maintenance-heavy budgets, achieving a significant reduction in TCO and driving revenue growth up to 80% faster than competitors by transforming raw data into a strategic roadmap for growth.
The role of a Managed Experience Provider (MxP) has become the essential evolution of traditional IT support.
In the traditional world of IT management, surface-level uptime monitoring has long been the ultimate (but often misleading) goal. If servers are humming and tickets are closed within the allotted time, the IT department celebrates. However, as we navigate 2026, a massive disconnect has emerged: it is entirely possible to have a 99.9% uptime SLA while your employees are struggling with “digital friction” that burns hours of productivity.
The old MSP model is no longer sufficient for the complexities of modern business. We are seeing the rise of the managed experience provider, where the focus shifts from managing the “plumbing” of IT to managing the actual human experience. By redefining visibility through advanced analytics, an MxP turns raw data into a strategic roadmap for growth, ensuring that technology serves the person behind the screen rather than just the machine.
For decades, IT was viewed strictly as a cost center. Organizations sought support to keep hardware running and software patched. However, this commodity-level service overlooks the “70% problem,” where most IT budgets are swallowed by maintenance rather than innovation.
A managed experience provider changes this dynamic. By 2026, global IT spending is projected to hit $6.15 trillion, with a significant shift toward experience-led IT services. Businesses are no longer satisfied with “uptime”; they demand outcome-based IT services that prove technology is driving revenue and retention.
Standard monitoring tells you that a system is running. Experience-driven management tells you how it is being used. This requires a transition from basic telemetry to sophisticated AI-powered IT operations.
True visibility in 2026 involves correlating three distinct data layers:
When these are combined through AI-driven managed services, the “invisible” problems become clear. If a CPU spike in a cloud server causes a 2-second lag in your CRM, an MxP’s analytics identify this as a “productivity leak” and initiates proactive management before the user even considers filing a ticket.
Furthermore, this visibility extends into the hybrid work environment. Traditional telemetry often stops at the corporate firewall, but a managed experience provider looks at the end-to-end journey. Whether an employee is at home, in a coffee shop, or in the office, MxP analytics provides a unified view of the digital workplace. This depth allows leadership to identify if a performance issue is systemic, localized to a specific region, or unique to a specific hardware profile. By moving beyond binary “up/down” indicators, organizations can finally see the quiet quitters of technology—those who have stopped reporting issues and have simply accepted a degraded, frustrated work state.
The most significant differentiator for an MxP is the implementation of Experience Level Agreements (XLA). While SLAs measure the process (e.g., “Time to Respond”), Experience Level Agreements (XLA) measure the value (e.g., “Time to Productivity”).
As explored in our featured whitepaper, From SLAs to XLAs: Why Experience Is the New IT Currency, this shift is essential because technical uptime no longer guarantees a productive workforce.
To deliver these outcomes, an MxP relies on AI Powered IT Operations (AIOps). Research indicates that 90% of Global 2000 CIOs will use AIOps by the end of 2026 to automate remediation. At Synoptek, we operationalize this trend through aiXops—our proprietary platform that specifically correlates technical telemetry with human sentiment. This advanced evolution of AIOps enables:
One of the core benefits of the MxP model is the ability to provide results that lead to IT total cost of ownership reduction. Traditional MSPs often add “tech sprawl”—more tools, more agents, and more complexity. An MxP uses AI-driven managed services to prune this sprawl.
By 2026, 30% of enterprises will automate more than half of their network activities, leading to massive efficiency gains. This modernization ensures that your IT spend is a predictable business asset rather than a black hole of expenses. When you reduce “digital friction,” you don’t just save money on support; you unlock the revenue potential of your workforce. CX leaders who prioritize experience-led IT services are growing revenue 80% faster than their competitors.
In 2026, visibility is the difference between a thriving digital workplace and one plagued by “tech sprawl.” Organizations can no longer afford to operate in the dark, managing tech silos that ignore the end-user. The era of reactive, ticket-based IT is drawing to a close, replaced by a proactive, data-rich environment where every bite of telemetry is analyzed through the lens of human experience.
By partnering with a managed experience provider, businesses gain the insights needed to drive growth, reduce friction, and finally solve the “70% problem.” This partnership transforms IT from a utility into a primary engine of competitive advantage. Whether through AI-powered IT operations or human-centric strategy, the goal remains the same: ensuring technology serves the people, not the other way around.
Ultimately, the future of IT isn’t just about faster speeds or bigger feeds; it’s about creating an environment where every employee has the digital freedom to innovate, collaborate, and succeed without the shadow of technical friction.
There was a time when CIOs were evaluated on a simple set of metrics: uptime, cost control, and project delivery.
That time has passed.
Today, boards are asking a fundamentally different question: “What is technology actually delivering for the business?”
This shift—subtle on the surface but profound in impact—was the central theme of Synoptek’s CIO Boardroom Series. What emerged is a new reality: IT performance is now the baseline. Business impact is the expectation.
At the same time, CIOs are navigating an increasingly complex landscape. Investment in AI, cybersecurity, and cloud platforms continues to rise. Yet across industries, a familiar pattern persists:
This creates a defining tension for modern CIOs: more investment, more scrutiny, and far less tolerance for ambiguity.
In many organizations, AI has moved from curiosity to urgency almost overnight. Boards are no longer asking whether AI is being explored; they are asking where it is delivering measurable value.
This puts AI ROI for CIOs directly under the spotlight. But maximizing ROI from AI is harder than it looks. The challenge is not a lack of activity. Most organizations are actively piloting AI across functions. The problem is that value is often measured incorrectly.
AI is still frequently evaluated through traditional lenses:
As efficiency increases, organizations rarely scale down. They scale up. Faster development leads to more releases. Better insights lead to more decisions. Improved workflows create demand for even greater output.
This dynamic is often explained by Jevons’ Paradox, which holds that efficiency drives expansion, not reduction.
For CIOs, this reframes the conversation. The question is no longer whether AI reduces cost. It is whether it enables the organization to operate differently, and more effectively.
When applied to the right problems, AI delivers clear and compelling outcomes.
Across the webinar, three patterns consistently emerged:
In one example, a service desk handling thousands of monthly tickets used AI to automate triage and routine requests. The outcome was immediate: reduced workload, faster resolution times, and improved employee experience.
In another, AI transformed how organizations handled unstructured data. Analysts recovered hundreds of hours annually, shifting focus from data preparation to decision-making. The result wasn’t just efficiency—it was speed and business momentum.
And in security operations, AI enabled teams to cut through alert noise, prioritize real threats, and significantly reduce response time—directly lowering risk exposure.
The takeaway is consistent: AI creates value by removing friction and amplifying capability, not simply by reducing cost.
That is what boards expect when they ask about AI ROI for CIOs.
While AI dominates strategic conversations, cybersecurity is where board-level concern is most immediate.
But here too, expectations have evolved.
Boards are no longer asking:
“Do we have the right tools?”
They are asking:
“If something goes wrong, how quickly can we recover?”
This shift places enterprise resilience strategy at the center of CIO accountability.
Many organizations operate with:
At the same time, the cost of a cyber incident has grown significantly, often exceeding millions when downtime, recovery, and operational disruption are factored in.
Mid-market organizations are particularly exposed. They face enterprise-level complexity without the same level of resources or integration.
In this environment, resilience becomes the defining metric.
Boards are focused on three outcomes:
The implication is clear: security is no longer about prevention alone; it is about continuity.
For CIOs, this requires a shift from managing tools to orchestrating outcomes.
The third challenge explored in the session is one many CIOs experience daily: the disconnect between IT performance and business outcomes.
On paper, everything may look strong:
And yet, the business may still struggle with:
This is where the SLA vs XLA conversation becomes critical.
SLAs measure system performance.
They answer: Is IT working?
XLAs measure experience.
They answer: Is the business benefiting?
That distinction changes everything.
An application can be available but difficult to use. A service can meet response targets but still frustrate employees. A system can function perfectly while delivering limited business value.
Boards are increasingly interested in metrics that reflect real impact:
This is why the shift from SLA vs XLA is gaining momentum.
It is not about replacing SLAs; it is about complementing them with metrics that reflect how technology is actually experienced.
What emerged from the CIO Boardroom discussion is not just a set of challenges; it is a new standard.
CIOs are no longer being evaluated on operational excellence alone. They are being evaluated on their ability to connect technology to outcomes in a way that is clear, measurable, and defensible.
That means:
Ultimately, the board is not asking whether IT is performing.
It is asking whether the business is stronger because of IT.
Watch the Full Webinar
Hear how technology leaders are navigating AI ROI for CIOs, building enterprise resilience strategies, and evolving beyond SLA vs XLA to deliver measurable business outcomes.
Digital workers are increasingly reliant on multiple IT services that interoperate and integrate. As a result, IT organizations are under growing pressure to prioritize not just availability, but experience.
Success is no longer defined by how many services IT delivers, but by how effectively those services work together. Hardware, networks, cloud platforms, security services, identity systems, and applications must operate as integrated components of a single, cohesive ecosystem.
As environments grow more complex, this level of coordination cannot be managed manually. Organizations are increasingly adopting experience-driven IT management to align systems around outcomes and ensure consistent, reliable digital work.
Digital experience is enabled by applications, but shaped across the entire technology stack. Performance, access, and reliability depend on how infrastructure, networks, security, and cloud services interact behind the scenes.
According to Salesforce’s State of IT Report, 86% of IT leaders say increasing system complexity and lack of integration are major barriers to delivering a unified digital experience.
This highlights a critical issue: interoperability is not a technical afterthought. It is an operational requirement.
Without coordination across these layers, even well-performing systems can create broken workflows and inconsistent experiences.
Fragmentation rarely happens intentionally. It builds over time.
Organizations deploy tools to solve immediate needs. A SaaS application supports a specific need for a business unit. A cloud service accelerates a project. A security solution mitigates a specific risk. Each decision is logical on its own.
Over time, however, these evolve independently. Integrations are added reactively, and dependencies remain undocumented.
Industry perspectives highlight that unmanaged IT environments increase complexity, cost, and security risk, reinforcing the need for more streamlined and experience-led approaches to service delivery. As environments scale and complexity grows, IT teams spend more time managing connections than enabling outcomes. Without visibility into interdependencies, even small changes can create cascading issues.
Traditional Service Level Agreements (SLAs) focus on system availability, response time, and incident resolution. These metrics are essential for maintaining operational stability.
However, SLAs do not capture how systems perform together.
An application may meet SLA targets and still fail to deliver a seamless experience if identity delays, network latency, or API issues disrupt workflows.
XLAs expand measurement from system performance to user outcomes. Instead of determining whether systems are operational, an XLA evaluates whether users can complete critical workflows efficiently and reliably.
By introducing Experience Level Agreements (XLA) alongside SLAs, organizations gain visibility into integration gaps and can prioritize Improvement based on real-world impact.
As ecosystems expand, manual monitoring and correlation become unsustainable.
Gartner predicts that in 2026, 60% of large enterprises will automate at least 30% of IT operations using AI-driven platforms.
This shift enables predictive IT operations, where organizations can anticipate issues rather than react to them.
By correlating signals across infrastructure, applications, and networks, predictive IT operations provide early insight into emerging issues. Organizations that adopt predictive IT operations reduce downtime, improve reliability, and minimize disruption across interconnected systems.
Seamless digital work requires more than well-performing components. It requires systems to be designed to work together.
Organizations should:
These practices enable intelligent IT operations, where systems are managed with full visibility across the stack. By adopting intelligent IT operations, organizations can ensure systems evolve cohesively rather than independently.
A Managed Experience Provider (MxP) formalizes interoperability as an operational discipline.
Rather than managing infrastructure, cloud, security, and applications separately, an MxP integrates them under a unified operating model. Advisory-led planning ensures systems are designed for alignment, while operational execution ensures they remain integrated over time.
This model combines experience-driven IT management with predictive IT operations and intelligent IT operations to deliver continuous optimization across the environment.
When systems are aligned, operational efficiency improves significantly.
Issues are resolved faster, changes introduce less risk, and redundant tools are eliminated. These improvements reduce manual effort and improve resource utilization.
This directly contributes to lower TCO by minimizing downtime, reducing rework, and preventing recurring incidents.
Over time, organizations that prioritize interoperability improve not only experience, but also operational stability.
Interoperable environments also enable agility. New capabilities can be introduced without disrupting existing systems and workflows. Cloud initiatives scale without creating instability. Security policies can adapt without blocking productivity.
By aligning systems around outcomes and experience, organizations reduce complexity and strengthen their ability to innovate and grow.
Seamless digital work is not the result of better tools. It is the result of better alignment.
Organizations that adopt experience-driven IT management and design systems for integration from the outset are better positioned to manage complexity and deliver consistent outcomes.
By combining Experience Level Agreements (XLA), predictive IT operations, and intelligent IT operations, organizations can move from fragmented environments to cohesive ecosystems that support efficiency, resilience, and long-term business performance.
Ready to evaluate how well your IT systems work together?
Connect with Synoptek to explore how a Managed Experience Provider approach can help you achieve seamless digital work and measurable outcomes.
As cyber threats evolve and the regulatory environment advances, organizations are under increasing pressure to demonstrate that their security posture is not only effective but also defensible.
Frameworks like the NIST Cybersecurity Framework have become the standard for evaluating and improving security maturity. Yet many organizations struggle with a fundamental question:
How do you actually use NIST to understand where you stand, and what to do next?
This blog explains what the NIST Cybersecurity Framework is, why it matters, and how you can use it to benchmark your security maturity in a practical and actionable way.
The NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) is a widely adopted set of guidelines designed to help organizations manage and reduce cybersecurity risk.
Developed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, it provides a structured approach to:
At its core, the framework is built around five key functions:
While the framework is straightforward in theory, applying it across modern environments, especially those spanning identity, cloud, and endpoints, is where complexity begins.

Security today is no longer just about perimeter defense; it’s about identity, access, and control across distributed environments.
Organizations face increasing challenges:
Many organizations rely on tools, dashboards, or scores to measure security. But these often provide a fragmented view, leaving critical gaps hidden until:
The NIST Cybersecurity Framework helps shift from tool-based visibility to structured, framework-aligned maturity.
Cybersecurity maturity refers to how consistently and effectively your organization implements and enforces security controls.
It helps answer crucial questions:
Without a clear maturity baseline, organizations operate reactively, addressing issues only when they become visible.
Benchmarking your security maturity against the NIST Cybersecurity Framework requires a structured, evidence-based evaluation across key control areas.
Here’s how leading organizations approach it:
Start by evaluating your current state across identity, cloud governance, and endpoint security.
This includes:
Align your findings to the five NIST functions (Identify, Protect, Detect, Respond, Recover).
This helps translate technical gaps into framework-aligned insights that leadership and auditors understand.
Not all gaps are equal. The goal is to uncover:
Instead of fixing everything at once, prioritize based on:
Translate findings into a clear, prioritized action plan that can be executed by IT and security teams.
While the framework is powerful, many organizations struggle to operationalize it because:
As a result, NIST becomes a compliance exercise rather than a strategic tool for improving security posture.
Many organizations rely on tools like Microsoft Secure Score to evaluate security. While useful, these scores often:
To truly benchmark maturity, organizations need a framework-aligned, evidence-based assessment.
This is where a structured approach, like a Security Assessment, comes in.
A focused 3–5 week Security Assessment provides:
Instead of guessing where you stand, you gain clarity, alignment, and a path forward.
If you’re preparing for an audit, transaction, or simply want to understand your true security maturity, the first step is visibility.
The NIST Cybersecurity Framework is more than a compliance tool; it’s a foundation for building a measurable, defensible security posture.
But the real value comes from how you apply it.
Organizations that move beyond fragmented tools and adopt a structured, framework-aligned approach gain:
The question isn’t whether you should use NIST; it’s whether you truly know where you stand.