Before covid, there was a decision to create a cloud native saas platform in azure (this is what drew me in in the first place). I had a lot of dev experience with one of the apps in their large suite already (they bought a version of the source for it).
Since there is a lot of legacy stuff in data centres, it meant taking those apps and "lifting and shifting" them into the cloud (Azure VMs). A lot of them would stay that way as they don't get changed much, but the ones that are still in active dev would be re-platformed (rewrite) to be cloud native over time. One new app, and a couple of the existing apps in the company were being re platformed before I started and continued while I've been here (again, all in azure - these will most likely stay there).
To assist with this, they hired a consultancy company (consisting of dev/infrastructure resource, project managers etc) to assist the existing teams in the migration, training on cloud development etc and to create the the new app.
But then after being there ~2 months, this consultancy company and all its resource were binned off. I think the costs of this consultancy were becoming too high because this happened quite quickly. They have been replaced but with no dev resource, only consultant architects.
The leadership then had meetings with MS and AWS and chose AWS as the cloud provider. Bit of a shock for a .net shop, but ok.. Then a further 2 months later, we are told that Oracle has been chosen as the cloud platform.
Since i've only been there 7 months (im in the Technical Architects team but not a senior member of staff) I was not involved in these meetings and i'm not sure how much tech input there was. Oracle basically told the company that they would handle the lift and shift for the deadline and that they would be cheaper than aws/azure (aws/azure couldn't match the price oracle quoted).
I have raised my concerns over what this will mean for app dev, but the decision appears to already be made based on the cost alone and my gut feeling is to consider going elsewhere. I don't know if that's an overreaction..