Disaster recovery should be in place for every organization’s in order of regaining access and functionality to its IT infrastructure after events like a natural disaster, cyber attack or hardware failure.
About Services
IT disaster recovery is the process of maintaining or reestablishing vital infrastructure and systems following a natural or human-induced disaster, such as a storm or battle. DR employs policies, tools, and procedures with a focus on IT systems supporting critical business functions.
5 Top Elements of an Effective Disaster Recovery Plan
- Disaster recovery team
- Risk evaluation
- Business-critical asset identification
- Hybrid Backups
- Testing and optimization
What Are the Benefits of having a Disaster Recovery plan?
Cost savings: Planning for potential disruptive events can save businesses hundreds of thousands of dollars and even mean the difference between a company surviving a natural disaster or folding.
Faster recovery: With our disaster recovery strategy and our tools, your business can be up and running much faster after a disaster, or even continue operations as if nothing had happened.
Questions About Our Backup Service
Cold Storage: is created to offer large amounts of storage at the lowest possible prices. We use Amazon’s S3 Glacier technology.
Hot Storage: Maintains up-to-date copies of data at all times. Usually is a local backup to a NAS or external drive, but they dramatically reduce down time in case of hardware failure
A hybrid backup is typically when you combine both on-premises storage and the public cloud as data backup destinations.
Yes, all cloud backups are encoded with an Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) 256-bit encryption algorithm. So if the data get's hacked the information is useless without the private key.
Local Back-up, Cloud Backup Hot (Instant) or Cold (With Delay), Data Center, Virtualization, Point-in-time copies and Instant Recovery.
Disaster recovery relies upon the replication of data and computer processing in an off-premises location not affected by the disaster. When servers go down because of a natural disaster, equipment failure or cyber attack, a business needs to recover lost data from a second location where the data is backed up. Ideally, an organization can transfer its computer processing to that remote location as well in order to continue operations.
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