Simple, Reliable, Affordable, Experienced.

Is Your Company’s Data Backed Up?

The answer should be “yes”, but too often many companies do not know how or when their data is being backed up or how it can be restored.

Streamline takes data backup VERY seriously. All of our clients have a detailed backup plan that addresses the major concerns of any backup strategy:

  • Scheduled Backup – what, when & how is your data being backed up?
  • Archival Backup – how long do you need to retain your data?
  • File Recovery and System Recovery – how will files or entire systems be recovered in the even of disaster, theft, data loss or corruption?
  • Off site Storage – does your company store critical data offsite?

Is your critical data safe? Contact us now to discuss ways we can protect your company’s data.

The time to plan your company’s backup
and recovery strategy is not after losing data 

Data Loss Facts

  • U.S. businesses lose over $12 billion per year because of data loss.
  • Hardware or system failure accounts for 78% of all data loss.
  • Human error accounts for 11% of all data loss.
  • Software corruption account for 7% of all data loss.
  • 93% of companies that lost their data center for 10 days or more due to a disaster filed for bankruptcy within one year of the disaster. 50% of businesses that found themselves without data management for this same time period filed for bankruptcy immediately. Source: National Archives & Records Administration in Washington
  • File corruption and data loss are becoming much more common, although loss of productivity continues to be the major cost associated with a virus disaster. Source: 7th Annual ICSA Lab's Virus Prevalence Survey, March 2002
  • Natural disasters account for only 1% of all data loss.
  • More vital data is being stored in smaller spaces.
  • Instant access to electronic data has become more crucial in day-to-day business.
  • Disaster prevention and recovery plans are often overlooked or outdated.
  • The average company spends between $100,000 and $1,000,000 in total ramifications per year for desktop-oriented disasters (both hard and soft costs.) Source: 7th Annual ICSA Lab's Virus Prevalence Survey, March 2002
  • In addition to being more prevalent, computer viruses were more costly, more destructive, and caused more real damage to data and systems than in the past. Source: 7th Annual ICSA Lab's Virus Prevalence Survey, March 2002