PARTNER, CHIEF TECHNOLOGY OFFICER
As Chief Technology Officer at SilverTech, Derek defines and drives the agency’s technology vision—helping clients harness data, digital platforms, and emerging technologies to solve complex business challenges and build meaningful, lasting customer relationships.
Known for finding solutions to the toughest and most complicated technology challenges, Derek combines innovation with deep expertise across enterprise architecture, cloud infrastructure, custom development, and big data. He brings a security-first mindset and a sharp focus on privacy and compliance, enabling organizations to build secure, scalable, and future-ready digital ecosystems.
Derek serves as a strategic adviser to both SilverTech’s technology partners and clients. He works closely with platform providers—often consulting on product roadmaps—to ensure solutions align with real-world business needs and deliver maximum value. He also helps client organizations develop and execute digital roadmaps that make the most of their existing systems and data, integrating legacy technologies with modern platforms where and when it makes sense to drive growth, stay competitive, and support long-term success.
Throughout his career, Derek has played a key role in shaping the tools and platforms that power modern digital marketing. He is a recognized authority and thought leader in the martech space—recently named a Kentico MVP and Progress Sitefinity Champion. Derek holds numerous certifications, including Kentico Developer, Kentico Marketer, Sitefinity Developer, and Sitecore Developer.
 
       
      
By: Allyson Couture | 10/20/25
For many organizations, the move to the cloud has delivered on much of what it promised: dynamic scalability, zero downtime deployments, and the freedom to offload infrastructure. In many ways, it’s delivered the kind of reliability and efficiency IT teams once only dreamed of.
But what do you do when the cloud doesn’t live up to its silver lining?
This morning, on October 20, 2025, an AWS outage centered in its US-East-1 (Northern Virginia) region took out some of the biggest names on the web. Apps went dark, websites slowed or failed, and the ripple effects were felt across industries. While AWS engineers are actively working toward full recovery, this outage serves as a stark reminder that even the largest cloud provider can falter and “resolved” issues can resurface unexpectedly.
In keeping with our earlier guidance on “What Happens When Your Cloud Provider Goes Down,” this event gives us real-world context for what to expect, how to respond, and how to prepare.
Here's a summary of the outage and how it played out:
If your business or website uses AWS, here are the key steps you should take right now (and a few things to prepare for in the future) based on what happened today:
Our earlier blog pointed out several risks when the cloud provider goes down, here’s how today’s incident mirrors them:
Learn about our hosting and managed services and contact us today with any concerns you have about your current systems.
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