Why Backups Fail
Many businesses think they have backups, but discover too late that their backups aren't working. Common reasons backups fail include:
Backups Not Running
Backup software stops working due to errors, expired licenses, or configuration changes. No one notices until a disaster occurs.
Incomplete Backups
Backups run but don't capture all critical data. Important files, databases, or system configurations are missing.
Corrupted Backups
Backup files become corrupted over time, making them unusable when you need to restore. This often happens with old backup media or storage failures.
Ransomware Encrypts Backups
If backups are connected to your network, ransomware can encrypt them too. You lose both your live data and your backups.
Untested Recovery
Backups exist but have never been tested. When disaster strikes, you discover the recovery process doesn't work or takes too long.
Outdated Backups
Backups are too old to be useful. Critical data changed since the last backup, or the backup retention period is too short.
Our backup and disaster recovery services address each of these failure points with automated monitoring, regular testing, and multiple backup layers.
Our Backup Strategy: The 3-2-1 Rule
We follow the industry-standard 3-2-1 backup rule to ensure your data is protected:
3 Copies of Data
Keep three copies of your data: your original files plus two backups. This ensures redundancy if one backup fails.
2 Different Media Types
Store backups on at least two different types of media. We use local network storage and cloud storage to protect against media failures.
1 Offsite Backup
Keep at least one backup offsite. If your office is damaged by fire, flood, or theft, your offsite backup remains safe.
Local, Offsite, and Immutable Backups
We use a multi-layered backup approach that combines different backup types for maximum protection:
Local Backups
Fast local backups stored on your network for quick recovery of individual files or recent changes. These provide rapid access but are vulnerable to physical disasters and ransomware.
Offsite Cloud Backups
Backups stored in secure cloud data centers, protected from local disasters. These backups are accessible from anywhere and provide geographic redundancy.
Immutable Backups
Backups that cannot be modified or deleted, even by ransomware or attackers. These provide the highest level of protection against cyberattacks that target backups.
This combination ensures you can recover quickly from common issues (using local backups) while maintaining protection against major disasters (using offsite and immutable backups).
Ransomware Recovery
Ransomware attacks are increasingly common, and they specifically target backups. Our backup strategy includes ransomware protection:
- Immutable backups that cannot be encrypted by ransomware
- Air-gapped backups that are disconnected from your network
- Multiple backup versions so you can restore from before the attack
- Rapid recovery to minimize downtime and business impact
If ransomware encrypts your files, we can restore from clean backups without paying the ransom. Recovery time depends on the size of your data, but we work to restore critical systems first to get you back online quickly.
The Cost of Downtime
When your systems go down, every minute costs money. The cost of downtime includes:
Lost Revenue
You can't process sales, serve customers, or complete work. For many businesses, this means zero revenue during downtime.
Productivity Loss
Employees can't work, projects are delayed, and deadlines are missed. Salaries continue while productivity stops.
Customer Impact
Customers can't reach you, orders can't be processed, and service is interrupted. Some customers may take their business elsewhere.
Recovery Costs
Emergency IT support, data recovery services, and system restoration all cost extra when done urgently.
Reputation Damage
Extended downtime damages your reputation. Customers and partners lose confidence in your reliability.
Regulatory Fines
If downtime causes you to miss compliance deadlines or data protection requirements, you may face regulatory fines.
For most small businesses, a single day of downtime costs thousands of dollars. Proper backup and disaster recovery minimizes downtime and reduces these costs significantly.
"I Could Not Run My Business Without Them!"
Having things managed and backed up in one place has been the single biggest benefit to Blue Heron. LecsIT is always super easy to reach, and they are always willing to educate us and expand services as our business needs them.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Your Data Properly Protected?
Schedule a backup assessment. We'll review your current backup strategy, test your recovery process, and ensure your data is protected against disasters and ransomware.
Schedule Backup Assessment