When an incident occurs, Backup and Disaster Recovery is your lifeline to restore your important information.
Data loss happens more often than people think
Hardware fails, people delete the wrong files, software bugs corrupt databases, ransomware locks everything. Backups let you roll back instead of starting from zero.
Keep your business running
Disaster recovery plans define how fast you can restore systems and how much data you can afford to lose. Without that plan, downtime drags on and revenue is impacted.
Customer trust and reputation
People forgive outages; they don’t forgive lost data. Fast recovery shows reliability.
Cost Control
Recovery without preparation is chaotic and expensive. Planned recovery is predictable and far cheaper than rebuilding systems and re-creating data.
Backups and basic disaster recovery protect your data and systems by keeping safe copies and a plan to restore them when something goes wrong.
Regular backups (like daily or weekly) save versions of files to separate storage—often offsite or in the cloud—so if hardware fails, data is corrupted, or there’s a cyberattack, you can recover what was lost.
Disaster recovery focuses on how quickly you can restore operations: identify critical systems, store backup images, and have clear steps to rebuild or switch to standby resources like hot sites. Together, they reduce downtime, limit data loss, and keep a business running even after major disruptions.