Sometimes the most exciting conference day of the year does not take place in Copenhagen, Seattle, or Berlin – but just a few minutes’ walk from our Bern office. That is exactly where the Azure Bootcamp Switzerland 2026 took place on May 21, at Welle 7, right next to Bern’s main train station. Sold out, three parallel tracks, a Swiss community that knows each other, and an energy that only a truly community-driven conference can generate.
What makes the Azure Bootcamp so special is its DNA: It is and remains a 100% community-driven, non-profit conference organized by the Azure User Groups in Zurich and Bern. Run by engineers for engineers. That is exactly what you feel the moment you walk through the doors of Welle 7. The conversations are more direct, the questions more honest, and the exchange extends far beyond the sessions. This is not a gathering of an anonymous conference crowd, but a network of people who work on the same topics every day, and who want to know how things are going for everyone else.
For us as a Bern-based company, the day had an extra special flavor: a home game. And a home game that showed just how vibrant the Swiss Microsoft community is right now.
René Räber, CTO at Microsoft Switzerland, set the tone for the day with his keynote on «Azure Sovereign Architecture.» In Europe, and especially in Switzerland, digital sovereignty has evolved from a buzzword into a very concrete requirement. Data residency, key management, operational control, and democratic oversight are no longer just nice-to-haves but rather prerequisites for a growing number of use cases in the public sector and regulated industries.
It was particularly fascinating to see just how concretely Switzerland is now leading the way in this area. Räber presented a continuum ranging from sovereign public cloud, sovereign private cloud, and customer-operated or fully disconnected environments – each tailored to the regulatory realities of the DSG, GDPR, sector-specific requirements, and national data protection laws. The message was clear: sovereignty is not a binary switch, but a spectrum. And the Swiss market is currently serving as a prime example of how innovation and sovereignty can be conceived simultaneously.
For us at Epic Fusion, this was one of the most important strategic messages of the day. The discussion in client projects is currently shifting fundamentally away from «Are we compliant?» toward «Which sovereignty mode suits which workload?» Anyone working with public administration, healthcare, or financial services providers must be able to actively shape this distinction today – not just when the compliance department comes knocking.
Three parallel tracks ran throughout the day, and the range of topics was impressive. «Time Bombs in Entra ID» showed just how many unseen risks lurk in app registration. «Subscription Vending at Scale» at Vaudoise and «From Chaos to Control: Streamline Azure Policy Management with EPAC» made it clear just how seriously major Swiss organizations are now taking governed self-service. «Building Secure RAG: Enforcing Data Governance with Azure AI Search and Purview Sensitivity Labels» struck a chord – RAG security will often be the deciding factor for AI projects in 2026.
Also featured were «Hybrid AI – Orchestrating Collaboration Between On-Device and Cloud Models» the FinOps perspective on rapidly rising AI costs, and a truly moving closing talk by the sureVIVE founders on how Azure can save real lives. The program spanned the spectrum from platform governance to AI to mission-critical workloads, and it is precisely this breadth that defines the bootcamp.