Backup & Data Recovery

Backups are only valuable if they can actually be restored.

Backup and data recovery support focuses on backup health, coverage, retention strategy, restore capability, and verification so businesses are not relying on assumptions when recovery becomes urgent.

  • Backup health and coverage review
  • Retention strategy awareness
  • Restore testing and verification support
  • Recovery workflow alignment to business priorities
Backup vault illustration representing restore confidence and protected data

Restore confidence matters

If backup jobs appear successful but recovery has never been tested, risk may be hiding in plain sight. We help bring that risk into view before it becomes expensive.

Pain points

Coverage gaps, unclear retention, false confidence in backup alerts, and no documented restore workflow can leave businesses exposed at the moment they expect protection.

What is included

We review backup scope, locations, retention assumptions, restore workflows, testing cadence, monitoring, and how the strategy supports real recovery priorities.

Who it is for

SMBs using on-prem, cloud, SaaS, or hybrid systems that need better confidence in restore readiness, insurance answers, or operational resilience.

Why It Matters

Backup success messages do not always equal business recovery.

  • Restore times may be too slow for real operational needs
  • Critical systems may not be protected in the right order or frequency
  • Retention may not support legal, client, or insurance expectations
  • Restore procedures may depend on unavailable knowledge or missing credentials

Typical review areas

Coverage Which systems, files, endpoints, SaaS platforms, and workloads are actually backed up.
Retention How long data is kept, where it is stored, and whether the schedule matches business and compliance needs.
Verification Whether restore testing has been performed and what the results say about real readiness.
Recovery workflow How restoration would be prioritized and executed during an incident.

Backup strategy is strongest when it supports both disaster recovery planning and ransomware readiness.

FAQ

Questions about backup and restore readiness