For businesses with 15–150 employees with small or no IT staff.
For businesses with 150–5,000 employees who need to fill gaps or are looking for help.
FEATURED RESOURCE
Working from home is not going anywhere. In fact, research shows that post-pandemic 42% of employees who worked strictly from a company-based location will not return to the office. Do you know how this will impact your business? Learn more about the tools needed to protect your client data and improve employee productivity.
Real People. Right Now.
From the first hello, the Locknet® team is dedicated to serving you and your needs.
For businesses with 15–150 employees with small or no IT staff.
For businesses with 150–5,000 employees who need to fill gaps or are looking for help.
FEATURED RESOURCE
Check out the latest happenings in the world of IT from our Locknet® experts. In this issue, we highlight some topics your organization should be aware of to minimize risks. Specifically, mitigating insider threats to your security and the risks of hanging on to legacy data.
Real People. Right Now.
From the first hello, the Locknet® team is dedicated to serving you and your needs.
A business continuity plan is one of those things an organization typically doesn’t fully appreciate until it’s needed. While none of us can predict the future, there are clearly ongoing and persistent threats to business operations today. With contagious viruses, ransomware attacks, and natural disasters consistently making news, it’s become clear that businesses need to plan for the unexpected. And the stakes are high. According to a report from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), 40% of businesses do not reopen following a disaster. On top of that, another 25% fail within one year. A business continuity plan is an organization’s best tool for surviving disruption.
A business continuity plan is an organization-wide strategy establishing procedures and policies to maintain a business’s critical operations and keep it running during an unexpected disruption or disaster.
A business continuity plan has a wider scope than a disaster recovery plan, both of which are important for any business to have. A disaster recovery plan primarily focuses on the restoration of data and the IT infrastructure following a disaster. Whereas a business continuity plan includes contingencies for vendors, assets, processes, operations, human resources, and every other aspect of a business.
The business continuity plan contains a detailed outline and guide for people to follow during an emergency. It includes a checklist and contact information for key personnel and resources.
Although every business interruption is unique, the blueprint of a business continuity plan is focused on establishing resiliency, recovery, and contingency. Here are the essential elements of a business continuity plan.
Data protection is just one aspect of any business continuity plan, but it’s an essential one. It’s not an overstatement to say that without your data, you have no business. Be prepared and protect your business’s data from the unexpected disruptions of a ransomware attack, hardware failure, or building disaster. Regular backups are important, but they have no value if you cannot also restore quickly and easily after a disaster. Locknet’s Reinforce® Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) provides fully managed data backup, retention, disaster prevention, and recovery.
Locknet’s Reinforce® DRaaS includes:
As a Managed IT company, we work tirelessly to shore up protection for our clients so their business is shielded from IT emergencies that would disrupt operations. Contact the team at Locknet Managed IT to protect your organization against unexpected business interruptions and data loss.
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