4 Scenarios To Make You Feel Good About Having Disaster Recovery Solutions


            If your office involves a lot of technology, you’re bound to run into disasters. It’s never a question of IF, but rather WHEN will a disaster occur. Regardless of how your company operates, there’ll always be scenarios that you can be prepared for.

Natural Disasters
            Weather can change in the blink of an eye, regardless of what your weatherman said this morning. If your area of business is prone to flooding and rainstorms, you could be at risk for water damage and losing data. Earthquakes can be extremely random as well, destroying buildings and lives. Even a simple power outage can have extreme consequences in regards to your data. Disaster can strike at any time, it’s up to your IT team to prepare accordingly.

Hardware Failures
            A recurring issue for businesses that rely on technology is failing hardware. If you don’t have reliable ways of monitoring and maintaining hardware, it can be easy to let it get overburdened with the workload, which ultimately leads to a malfunction or failure. Nothing in technology can last forever, so a failure at the wrong time can severely cripple your organization.

User Error
            Similar to hardware failures, a user error can bring down your business or cause data to be lost. Mainly because people are not perfect, we make mistakes and it’s understandable. People mistakenly hand over their credentials or forget where they saved a file all the time. This makes a hacker’s job much easier when information is quite literally handed to them. User error is a large cause of data being lost or destroyed, and it’s important to have your data backed up in case a user makes one of these mistakes.

Hacking Attacks
            Even if you never expect yourself to be hacked, always assume that you’re being targeted, because you most likely are. If your company collects sensitive information such as financial records or personal information of clients, you need to realize that you’re a likely target for a hacker. All it takes is a misclicked link, or some malware to put your data at risk. Hackers generally have the intent of stealing, or straight up deleting your data. It’s up to you to maintain reliable backups of your data in the event of being hacked.

            Ultimately, you have to be prepared to recover your data. In this case, it’s better to have a backup and not need it, rather than not have a backup, and be out of luck when the impossible occurs. Check out how we deal with disaster recovery at www.Vodigy.com.


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