A tiered disaster recovery approach enables organizations to align protection with business impact, balancing cost, risk, and compliance while ensuring resilience. Outdated recovery plans often fail ...
Your old disaster recovery plan won’t cut it anymore. IT environments are getting more complex and attacks more sophisticated. That means IT teams need to refine their data resilience strategies to ...
Despite an increase in the shift from offsite backup to virtual standby methods, cost is still the highest priority when choosing a disaster recovery strategy. This demonstrates an increase in ...
Scott Opalewski is a seasoned senior business development manager with over three decades of experience bridging technology solutions and business needs across multiple industries, including ...
Protect Your Microsoft Environment With Disaster Recovery Strategies That Work No organization is immune to disaster, whether it’s ransomware, cloud outages, or unexpected system failures. That’s why ...
Disasters that severely impact business operations can come in many shapes and sizes. Events like fires, floods, snowstorms, hurricanes and tornadoes can bring companies to a screeching halt by ...
Anuj Tyagi is a seasoned SRE with more than a decade of experience in cloud, AI & cybersecurity. Tech speaker and open-source contributor. In an era of cyberthreats, pandemics and natural disasters, ...
Los Angeles County Supervisor Kathryn Barger is pushing for a rapid new tool inside county government, asking the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday to order staff to return within seven days with a plan ...
Do you have a business continuity plan in place? Every hour counts in trucking. Being prepared for disaster recovery can be the difference between keeping customers and losing to the competition.
What is the most crucial aspect of business to focus on today? Finance? Logistics? Developers? It’s really hard to say, but the truth is that any employee can be replaced by someone (or something) ...
The Oregon Department of Emergency Management (OEM) has adopted the Oregon Disaster Recovery Plan, Volume IV.