Backup & Disaster Recovery
Reliable backup isn't just about having copies of data — it's about knowing you can actually recover when something goes wrong.
Most Backup Plans Fail the Test That Matters
The test that matters is the one that happens after a ransomware event, a hardware failure, or a fire. Most organizations find out too late that their backups weren't running, weren't tested, or couldn't recover what they needed in time.
We design backup and disaster recovery systems around what actually needs to happen — not just what looks good on paper. That means documented RTOs, tested restores, offsite copies, and a recovery runbook your staff can execute under pressure.
Request a Recovery AssessmentWhat We Protect
- File servers and shared storage
- Windows and Linux servers
- Microsoft 365 email and SharePoint
- SQL and database servers
- Virtual machines (VMware, Hyper-V)
- EHR-adjacent configuration data
- Network device configurations
What a Complete BDR Solution Includes
Backup Policy Design
We document what gets backed up, how often, where it goes, and how long it's retained — aligned to your recovery time and recovery point objectives.
Automated Backup Execution
Scheduled, automated backups with alerting on failures. No relying on staff to manually initiate backups or check results.
Offsite & Cloud Copies
Backup data stored in at least two locations — on-site for fast restores, offsite or cloud for protection against local disasters.
Tested Restore Verification
We verify backups actually work by running restore tests on a schedule. A backup you've never tested is a backup you can't trust.
Ransomware-Resilient Design
Backup systems isolated from production environments, immutable storage options, and air-gapped copies so ransomware can't encrypt your only way out.
Documented Recovery Plan
A written, tested recovery runbook so your team knows what to do on day zero — not a plan being written while the clock is running.
Recovery Starts with the Right Questions
How long can your organization operate without this system? Hours? Days? The answer determines what backup architecture you actually need.
How much data can you afford to lose? A day's worth? An hour's? This drives backup frequency and whether you need real-time replication for critical systems.
Three copies of data, on two different media types, with one copy offsite. This is the baseline — not a ceiling. Healthcare and government environments often need more.
We run documented restore tests on a schedule. You get a written report showing what was recovered, how long it took, and what gaps were identified.
Know if your backups would actually save you
We'll review your current backup environment, run a recovery simulation, and tell you honestly what works and what doesn't.