“Growth of the Company Depends on Right Backup Strategy”

Mar 31, 2022 | Retrospect, StorCentric

Backup is the core of the infrastructure for the enterprises. Right backup strategy can really put the organizations in the shape during the need of the business continuity and planning during the disaster.

Data backup and recovery is the process of backing up your data in the event of a loss and setting up secure systems that allow you to recover your data as a result. Data backup requires the copying and archiving of computer data to make it accessible in case of data corruption or deletion. You can only recover data from an earlier time if you have backed it up with a reliable backup device.

Backing up data cannot always restore all of your business operating systems data and settings. For instance, computer clusters, database servers, or active directory servers may need additional types of disaster recovery since a backup and recovery may not entirely reconstitute them.

Today, you can back up a significant deal of data using cloud storage; therefore, archiving your data on a local system’s hard drive or external storage is not necessary. What’s more, you can set up your mobile devices using cloud technologies to allow automatic data recovery.

Right Data Backup strategy to grow company

As business becomes increasingly digitized, the urgency of a data backup strategy continues to mount. Whether its ransomware, hacker or data lost to thrives or natural disaster, you trade secrets and customer database are at risk of being stolen and sold off if you don’t put the necessary protection in place.

It takes businesses many years to gather essential data, and the last thing you need is to lose your valuable digital assets to external or internal threats.

One of the most effective ways to shield your company against data loss is implementing a smart data backup strategy. If you’re not an expert in data protection and secure storage, working with a team of professional to ensure all bases are covered and your is an secure as possible.

Examples of Data Loss

There are numbers of ways your business could potentially lose company data. Some involve cybercrime; others could be the result of an accident or crash. Some of the most common causes of lost data:

  • Ransomware attackers steal data and demand large sum of money to make it accessible again.
  • Hackers could make their way into online storage accounts.
  • Attacker could use malware to attack computer.
  • Critical data could be deleted by disgruntled employee or accidentally erased. .
  • Break-ins account for many companies losing data because the majority of electronic items that are stolen are never recovered.

Backing up to the Cloud

The pandemic has undoubtedly forced CIOs’ hands in the face of technical and compliance concerns. Backing up users’ devices directly to the cloud should be more reliable, easier for employees and, with the right controls, compliant with data protection regulations. The option to back up to private cloud instances provides further assurance.

But organisations are also looking at cloud-to-cloud backup. More on-premise suppliers now support backups for infrastructure as a service (IaaS) and platform as a service (PaaS), including cloud-native workloads and virtual machines, according to Gartner.

Backing up to the cloud also helps deal with another pandemic impact – IT staff no longer need to physically access the datacentre to manage storage.

Surya Varanasi, CTO, StorCentric, said “On World Backup Day, we are reminded that ransomware and other types of malicious malware can disrupt any environment. And further, while hundreds of thousands if not millions might be at stake for the actual ransom payment, the gravest consequences of ransomware is data loss and downtime. Both present almost incalculable expense, with significant downtime resulting in potentially millions in lost revenue, as well as costly legal fees and regulations compliance cost, in addition to a rise in insurance premiums and decreased customer trust.

JG Heithcock, GM, Retrospect, a StorCentric Company, said, “On World Backup Day we are reminded of the myriad reasons a sound data backup strategy and proven solutions are critical to the success of virtually all organizations, as it is a given that at some point most will suffer a failure, disaster or cyber-attack. However, given the world’s economic and political climate, the customers I speak with are most concerned about their ability to detect and recover from a malicious ransomware attack.

Organizations must be able to detect ransomware as early as possible to stop the threat and ensure their ability to remediate and recover. A backup solution that includes anomaly detection to identify changes in an environment that warrants the attention of IT is a must. Administrators must be able to tailor anomaly detection to their business’s specific systems and workflows, with capabilities such as customizable filtering and thresholds for each of their backup policies. And, those anomalies must be immediately reported to management, as well as aggregated for future ML/analyzing purposes.