Chief executive Satya Nadella has been focusing on cloud services and revenue for the division rose 5% to $6.3bn.
However,
profits for the three months to 31 December fell 15% to $5bn (£3.4bn)
as the strong dollar and falling PC sales took their toll.
Total revenue also slipped 10.1% to $23.8bn.
Both numbers were better than analysts had expected.
NPD
Group analyst Stephen Baker said: "People who think Microsoft is
sliding into irrelevancy really need to re-evaluate how they see the
company. They are a software-first company in a world that is
increasingly about software."
Matt Howard, a venture capitalist at Norwest Ventures, said Microsoft had "nailed the cloud".
Mr Nadella said: "The enterprise cloud opportunity is massive - larger than any market we have ever participated in."
Microsoft's
combined cloud business, which also includes other divisions such as
Office 365, was on track for $9.4bn in annual revenue - higher than its
previous forecast of $8.2bn.
The global cloud storage industry
was worth almost $19bn last year, according to Research and Markets. The
group estimates that will rise to $65bn by 2020.
Microsoft's decision to focus more on cloud services - where its competitors include Amazon, Google, IBM and Cisco - has helped it move away from the declining PC market.
Microsoft's revenue from personal computing, which includes the Windows business, fell 5% in the quarter to $12.7bn.
Surface success
Global PC shipments fell 10.6% in the fourth quarter compared with the same period in 2014, according to IDC.
The
research firm said PC sales should improve later this year as companies
that had delayed replacing computers ahead of the release of Windows 10
last summer start buying again.
Tablet computers were a bright
spot for Microsoft, with revenue up 29% following the launch of the
Surface Pro 4 and Surface Book.
The number of people using the Xbox Live service for digital content and video games climbed 30% to a record 48 million.
Shares in Microsoft were up 4.2% to $54.25 in after-hours trading in New York and have risen 10% in the past 12 months.
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