PTC has enabled its Windchill product lifecycle management platform and Codebeamer application lifecycle management tool to operate in Microsoft’s cloud environments up to the Department of War Impact Level 6 classification.

As agencies and contractors continue to modernize their technology environments, developments such as PTC’s expansion into Microsoft mission cloud environments reflect the broader pace of change across the federal landscape. The Potomac Officers Club’s 2026 Digital Transformation Summit on April 22 will bring together government and industry leaders to discuss modernization strategies, enterprise IT, AI and other emerging technologies. Save your seat now!
In a blog post published Friday on the PTC website, Alexander Daly, head of PTC’s federal aerospace and defense efforts for DOW programs, wrote that the designation allows defense contractors to deploy the digital engineering tools in Azure mission cloud environments designed to support classified workloads, including those used by DOW, the intelligence community and the defense industrial base.
What Is PTC Windchill?
Windchill is PTC’s product lifecycle management platform. It manages product data, configurations and engineering processes throughout a system’s lifecycle to help organizations automate routine tasks, improve decision-making and optimize product development, among others.
What Does PTC Codebeamer Do?
Codebeamer is PTC’s application lifecycle management platform. It supports software development activities, including requirements management, traceability, testing and release management.
The open platform extends ALM with product line configuration capabilities and provides digital workflows to facilitate collaborative development.
How Do PTC Platforms Support the Defense Industrial Base?
According to Daly, combining PTC’s PLM and ALM capabilities with Microsoft’s Azure Government Secret cloud and other mission cloud environments could enable defense contractors to perform end-to-end engineering; eliminate dependence on outdated on-premises systems; establish secure engineering environments within weeks; and meet urgent operational requirements.
“It’s a direct boost to the DIB’s ability to deliver capability ‘at the speed of need,’” he added.


