NSQ 2 digital - Flipbook - Page 21
Querétaro, Microsoft Azure Mexico Central
also in Querétaro, Google Cloud Region in
Mexico, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure in
Querétaro, along with data centers operated
by
KIO Networks in Querétaro and Mexico City,
Equinix in Mexico City, ODATA in Querétaro,
Ascenty also in Querétaro, Axtel and Alestra in
Monterrey and Querétaro, and Layer 9 in
Monterrey. All of these nodes form part of a
broader network that connects enterprise
hubs, cloud providers, and international digital
infrastructure. Despite this growth, Mexico's
digital infrastructure still shows an uneven
geographic distribution. Most capacity
remains concentrated in a few technology
corridors, particularly in the center of the
country and in certain industrial cities in the
north. This means that infrastructure
availability can vary considerably depending
on the region where an operation is located.
For companies evaluating the nearshoring of
services, this reality has direct implications.
Digital infrastructure is not merely technical
support. It is the foundation on which entire
business processes operate: software
platforms, remote support centers, data
analytics, financial services, and technology
operations. When that infrastructure is robust,
service nearshoring can operate with levels of
reliability comparable to other international
markets. When it is insufficient or poorly
distributed, digital operations may face
limitations that do not always appear in initial
evaluations. For that reason, understanding a
country's digital infrastructure requires
looking beyond general perceptions about its
technological development.
In Mexico's case, the evidence suggests that
capacity exists and continues to expand. But
as with many forms of critical infrastructure, its
real value depends not only on its size, but on
how it is integrated into the operational design
of the companies that rely on it.
regions, and corporate networks depends on
telecommunications infrastructure capable of
transmitting large volumes of information with
low latency and high availability. Together,
these layers form the foundation of any
modern digital ecosystem.
In Mexico, the principal digital infrastructure
nodes include data centers operated by both
national and international companies, as well
as cloud regions that serve the local market
and support companies delivering global
services from within the country.
Among the most relevant nodes currently
present in Mexico are the AWS Cloud Region
in
MARCH 2026
Digital Edition
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