For today’s organizations, hybrid environments are a given. Whether for legacy reasons, regulatory requirements, or other specific needs, some of an enterprise’s critical data is likely to reside on, or in some cases, revert to, on-premises. However, other equally crucial data might be more efficiently and cost-effectively suited for storing and accessing in the cloud. Hence, hybrid.
Despite their logic and many benefits, hybrid environments bring new levels of complexity. And they bring greater vulnerability, with ever more devious cyber threats probing the multitude of network access points. More than 80% of breaches now involve data stored in hybrid environments, according to IBM’s Cost of a Data Breach 2023 Report.
That’s why, to avoid data loss and maintain a comprehensive level of protection across the entire environment, organizations need a blueprint for adopting and evolving their hybrid systems. The right solution enables data protection across workloads, providing the hybrid enterprise with the flexibility to protect data wherever it is today — and wherever it might be in the future.
A growing multitude of organizations in various industries have successfully implemented blueprints of this sort, built on the following foundational considerations:
Cost-optimization: A solution that can span a hybrid environment — SaaS, software and on-premises — and reduce infrastructure to manage and save administrative time.
Air-gapped security: Backup of the most critical data in cloud locations that can’t be accessed through whatever network or networks might be the focus of a cyberattack.
Fast recovery: Flexible, performance-optimized storage combined with the ability to send an air-gapped copy to the cloud for ransomware protection.
Broad coverage: An integrated set of software, appliance and SaaS offerings that span hybrid environments — and can evolve with the organization.
Simple management: Single-pane-of-glass dashboards for monitoring the hybrid environment while reducing management overhead.
Reliability for peace of mind: Leveraging industry-leading, trusted platform solutions rather than unproven point products.
Now’s the time to see it in action.
Ensuring an Insurer’s Data Backup
In Israel, Harel Group is the country’s top insurance and financial services provider, managing a large volume of data and investments. As such, a critical priority for the company is to ensure all that data is 100% backed up and can be restored without any issues.
Harel Group were using a secure solution to reliably protect more than 1.5PB of data in its on-premises environment. More recently, though, it has sought the flexibility and efficiencies of moving part of its infrastructure to the cloud. However, stringent industry regulatory requirements meant Harel could store sensitive data in the public cloud only if it could be backed up and stored as efficiently, securely and reliably as the on-premises data. What they needed was a SaaS solution.
“A SaaS solution takes care of data availability, but not the backup operation of the data,” said David Ben-Eli, system IT infrastructure manager for Harel Group. “We knew from day one that in taking on Microsoft 365, we would need a SaaS solution with good restore functionality that satisfies our business model and strategy.”
And so, Harel designed a blueprint based on a fully managed SaaS platform. The initial stage involved protecting approximately 1,000 of its employees’ mailboxes, which will soon cover more than 5,000 mailboxes.
The SaaS solution also enabled Harel to move its on-premises storage securely to the cloud, which has the dual advantage of reducing infrastructure costs and air-gapping its backups to mitigate the risk of ransomware attacks. “We have peace of mind that our data is secure,” Ben-Eli said. And the entire cost of the SaaS solution “is less than the cost of hiring more people.”
Backing up and protecting a company’s data in a hybrid environment is challenging enough. To be a vendor providing those capabilities to other companies comes with additional challenges.
A Vendor Puts its Data in Order
Evolutio, based in Madrid, is a leading enabler of cloud services that provides more than 5,600 kilometers of deployed networks with 6,100 virtual machines across three data centers. Its goal is to support customers’ digital transformations and foster their agility, flexibility and innovation capacity to optimize their business value.
To meet Evolutio’s needs, Alain Rodriguez, head of services management office, had to find an easy-to-use solution that consumed minimal resources to manage backups and security for Microsoft 365. His blueprint aimed to protect critical data before anything could go wrong.
So, Evolutio chose a single platform to back up and restore data for internal systems. By implementing a fully hosted SaaS-based solution, Evolutio no longer needs to worry about purchasing and maintaining equipment yearly. There is also no upfront investment required and no additional costs for support from the vendor. As a result, Evolutio’s business can grow on demand.
Resolving a Global Data Sprawl
Woodward, Inc. is an American designer, manufacturer and service provider of control systems and components for aircraft engines, industrial engines and power systems. The company has been growing significantly across dozens of global networking sites, with expansion that quadrupled the size of data and backed-up servers.
Virtual machine sprawl ate into company resources while complicating backup operations requiring standardized procedures. Slow legacy servers and apps made it impossible to meet recovery point objective (RPO) and recovery time objective (RTO) targets. And the absence of a coherent, comprehensive disaster recovery plan worsened things.
Topping this off was increased backup storage costs via disk and tape and a need for central management or cross-department visibility into data protection and backup policy compliance. There was no blueprint, in other words.
After trying unsuccessfully to address its needs with various disparate solutions, Woodward decided to replace everything with a comprehensive cloud-based backup and recovery platform. The company switched all global sites to this solution. As a result, Woodward has reduced the overhead of managing their data protection, can consistently enforce backup, restore and retention policies and has unprecedented comprehensive visibility and reporting across the end-to-end environment.
“I used to cringe when I received a restore request since backups would frequently fail,’’ said Loren Leveque, senior manager of IT and system networking. With the cloud-based platform, he said, “I am ready to support the backup, restore and archive needs of our company.”
Supporting Dozens of Manufacturing Plants
Linamar Corporation is a diversified global manufacturing company and world leader in designing, developing and producing highly engineered products. Because the Canadian company supports 61 plants globally, a cloud approach became necessary to streamline efficiency in backup and recovery.
Linamar had recently shifted from Microsoft Exchange on-premises to cloud-based Microsoft 365 for its 7,000+ users worldwide, and the company’s tape-based backup system didn’t support it. The built-in Microsoft 365 data protection was a start, but it couldn’t handle the rapidly expanding demands imposed by Linamar’s global network.
By moving to a cloud-based backup and recovery platform supporting Microsoft 365, Linamar saved the costs and administrative time previously needed for managing tapes. And backup is no longer a full-time job – it’s more like “when you need it, set it up,” said Kristian Smith, Linamar’s manager of technical services and support. Restores can now be handled 100% within the team and take hours to execute, not weeks.
Bringing it All Together
The examples might be as varied and numerous as enterprises worldwide with crucial data to protect. But these and any other success stories all have at least one thing in common: They took a blueprint approach to ensuring that their hybrid environment is secure and sufficiently future-proof.