There’s something inherently poetic about a business award: a shiny emblem, a moment of recognition, and—if you’re a true IT nerd—the lingering satisfaction of having wrangled squirrelly infrastructure into submission. Adventus Singapore Pte. Ltd. knows this feeling all too well, having just strutted away with the IT Services honour at the SBR National Business Awards 2025. Cue the confetti and alert the cloud servers: Singapore’s digital skies just got a bit brighter.
Is there any phrase more likely to make a stressed-out CIO breathe a sigh of relief than “scalable serverless IT infrastructure”? Adventus pinched that coveted catchphrase for its recent work with Moog Aircraft Services Asia Pte Ltd, a company whose very survival depends on everything running smoothly—after all, these folks keep flight control systems for next-gen aircraft aloft (literally). When Moog, the aviation guru with sixty years of winged wizardry, needed to set up a brand-new office, it faced a challenge shared by startups and seasoned pros alike: craft lean, agile IT minus the headache of traditional server rooms and tangled cables.
Adventus rolled out a full banquet of Microsoft Azure and Office 365 delights, banishing antiquated hardware and rolling in cloud-based storage, collaborative tools, and zero-gravity access from, well, just about anywhere. Moog’s engineers can now check critical docs or troubleshoot a jet from a lounge, a lab, or even the line at Ya Kun Kaya Toast—provided there’s WiFi, of course.
The narrative here reads like a modern fairy tale for businesses allergic to downtime. Adventus didn’t just plug in Box A to Socket B and call it a day. They engineered a setup that could flex, shrink, or expand as Moog’s needs demanded. Microsoft’s Azure platform quietly works in the background, crunching data and spinning up virtual machines with wizardly efficiency. Office 365, meanwhile, lets employees collaborate without resorting to “Reply All” disasters or hunting for the latest spreadsheet under three layers of inbox cryptography.
Remote IT support—sure, everyone promises it, but Adventus actually delivers. Their helpdesk claims a 90% remote fix rate, usually within 10 minutes. For more stubborn IT gremlins, an on-site response is promised in under two hours, which is arguably faster than most airplane meals arrive. Add Microsoft’s nearly mythic 99.9% uptime guarantee, and you’d have to work extremely hard to manufacture a real technical disaster.
Naturally, all this reduces TCO (total cost of ownership) and slashes wasted hours spent waiting for the “IT guy” to reboot anything. Moog’s single-point provider model means less finger-pointing and more actual problem-solving—unless, of course, somebody’s coffee machine is connected to the network, in which case all bets are off.
And who knows? With a bit of luck (and robust WiFi), next year’s winner might be reading about Adventus’s achievement on a device wholly untethered to the old-school grind. In the cloud, everyone’s got their head in the game—and their feet, mercifully, off the server room floor.
Source: Singapore Business Review Adventus Singapore Pte. Ltd. bags accolade at SBR National Business Awards 2025
Serverless Success: Less Hardware, More Bragging Rights
Is there any phrase more likely to make a stressed-out CIO breathe a sigh of relief than “scalable serverless IT infrastructure”? Adventus pinched that coveted catchphrase for its recent work with Moog Aircraft Services Asia Pte Ltd, a company whose very survival depends on everything running smoothly—after all, these folks keep flight control systems for next-gen aircraft aloft (literally). When Moog, the aviation guru with sixty years of winged wizardry, needed to set up a brand-new office, it faced a challenge shared by startups and seasoned pros alike: craft lean, agile IT minus the headache of traditional server rooms and tangled cables.Adventus rolled out a full banquet of Microsoft Azure and Office 365 delights, banishing antiquated hardware and rolling in cloud-based storage, collaborative tools, and zero-gravity access from, well, just about anywhere. Moog’s engineers can now check critical docs or troubleshoot a jet from a lounge, a lab, or even the line at Ya Kun Kaya Toast—provided there’s WiFi, of course.
Flexible Cloud Services: Soaring Above the Grounded Crowd
The narrative here reads like a modern fairy tale for businesses allergic to downtime. Adventus didn’t just plug in Box A to Socket B and call it a day. They engineered a setup that could flex, shrink, or expand as Moog’s needs demanded. Microsoft’s Azure platform quietly works in the background, crunching data and spinning up virtual machines with wizardly efficiency. Office 365, meanwhile, lets employees collaborate without resorting to “Reply All” disasters or hunting for the latest spreadsheet under three layers of inbox cryptography.
Remote IT support—sure, everyone promises it, but Adventus actually delivers. Their helpdesk claims a 90% remote fix rate, usually within 10 minutes. For more stubborn IT gremlins, an on-site response is promised in under two hours, which is arguably faster than most airplane meals arrive. Add Microsoft’s nearly mythic 99.9% uptime guarantee, and you’d have to work extremely hard to manufacture a real technical disaster.
Lean and Mean, Yet Unseen
The cleverest trick Adventus has up its sleeve isn’t flashy hardware—it’s invisibility. Moog can scale up infrastructure without ever worrying about a physical server lurking in a broom closet or a rogue USB stick harboring secrets. Employees fetch files on the fly, account security gets a titanium upgrade from two-factor authentication, and software patches slip in seamlessly behind the curtain, ensuring nobody gets caught with their digital pants down.Naturally, all this reduces TCO (total cost of ownership) and slashes wasted hours spent waiting for the “IT guy” to reboot anything. Moog’s single-point provider model means less finger-pointing and more actual problem-solving—unless, of course, somebody’s coffee machine is connected to the network, in which case all bets are off.
Hidden Risks and Unsung Heroes
But let’s not crown the cloud king just yet. Chasing serverless nirvana has its caveats. Even with Redmond’s robust security features, the human element is always the wildcard. Phishing, accidental deletions, or a particularly ambitious intern can still introduce chaos if vigilance slips. And while 99.9% uptime sounds dreamy, that 0.1% downtime is where disaster recovery plans prove their mettle. Adventus deserves kudos for ongoing support, but the real measure of excellence will be in how quietly—and quickly—it handles inevitable hiccups down the line.Singapore’s Race to the Top
In the end, awards like the SBR National Business Awards do more than decorate a lobby or puff up a press release—they set benchmarks that nudge the whole sector forward. Adventus’s win isn’t just a feather in its cap but a gentle nudge to every homegrown player in Singapore’s bustling IT scene: aim for infrastructure so streamlined, your engineers spend more time innovating and less time crawling under desks.And who knows? With a bit of luck (and robust WiFi), next year’s winner might be reading about Adventus’s achievement on a device wholly untethered to the old-school grind. In the cloud, everyone’s got their head in the game—and their feet, mercifully, off the server room floor.
Source: Singapore Business Review Adventus Singapore Pte. Ltd. bags accolade at SBR National Business Awards 2025
Last edited: