Veeam Cloud & Service Provider Silver

Continuing from last month’s topic of disaster recovery plans, we are pleased to share some fantastic news: Codus IT has been assigned the title of Veeam Cloud & Service Provider Silver Partner.

Codus IT - Veeam Silver Partner

Since 2006, Veeam® has been the global leader in Backup that delivers Cloud Data Management™. This entails backup and recovery, cloud mobility, monitoring and analytics, orchestration and automation, and governance and compliance for all data. Their mission is to make sure that data is always available, protected, and actively working for businesses across the globe. Therefore, regardless of where customer’s data resides — virtual and physical systems, SaaS and IaaS services, hybrid cloud or multi-cloud — the platform helps hundreds of thousands of companies keep their businesses running.

Veeam Platform Overview

In this new reality, where data is located across many different clouds and systems, ensuring availability becomes far more critical and challenging. The same holds for getting visibility into data — regardless of where it resides or the networks where it moves. Some businesses struggle just to know where all their data is located. It is even more challenging to be certain that data will be recoverable in the event of a disaster.

Availability of data today is based on mechanisms where data is often manually relocated to optimise cost and performance or to recover from a ransomware or security intrusion. Tomorrow’s availability must evolve to a more autonomous model, with a system that reacts and adjusts automatically to significant changes in the behaviour of data, apps, or users.

This level of automation is a big leap from where we are today. How can customers bridge that gap from where they are to where they need to go?

Veeam Cloud Data Management Platform is the best solution to help customers accelerate business agility. This is possible through automating core backup and recovery capabilities while enabling intelligent data orchestration, monitoring, governance and security.

Veeam 5 Capabilities of Cloud Data Management

The diagram below illustrates the Veeam 5 capabilities of cloud management: Backup & Recovery, Governance & Compliance, Orchestration & Automation, Monitoring & Analytics, Cloud Mobility.

veeam cloud management

Microsoft and Veeam: Seamless Integration with Microsoft Azure

Microsoft and Veeam® provide tightly integrated solutions for enterprises of all sizes, enabling availability for virtual, physical and cloud-based workloads. It eliminates complexity and simplifies business continuity between your business data centre and Microsoft Azure.

Two-step Portability to Azure: Maintain business continuity by easily migrating and recovering workloads in Azure

Backup Azure Workloads: Protect all your Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) workloads with the same proven Veeam solutions you already use

Long-term Data Retention in Azure: Reduce long-term data retention costs by tiering data to the cloud as it ages

Backup Office 365 to Azure: Reduce costs and leverage unlimited storage capacity by backing up Office 365 data to Azure

With over 100 industry awards, 365,000+ customers and 70,000 partners, Veeam® Cloud Data Management™ Platform is the most complete solution to help our customers evolve the way they manage data.

Organisations that run on Veeam Cloud Data Management Platform gain multi-fold improvements in efficiencies. They enjoy a far greater agility to respond to business needs and deliver new digital services. Veeam solutions receive the highest customer-satisfaction scores in the industry, 3.5x the industry average, for their simplicity, flexibility, and reliability. “It Just Works,” as hundreds of thousands of customers have said.

It’s a single platform for cloud, virtual, and physical to meet all your needs. It helps customers on the journey to modernizing their Backup practice. As a result, it also accelerates hybrid cloud, and adheres to data security and regulations.

Together, we make sure data is always available, protected and actively working for your business.

Speak to our team today on 0161 763 4529 or email us at hello@codus.co.uk to learn more.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

A Disaster Recovery Plan, often known as a DRP or Business Continuity Plan, is a detailed and strategic step-by-step plan for restoring data and IT infrastructure in the event of a human or natural disaster.

Covid-19 has been an eye opener for many business owners and IT managers. It has highlighted the importance of planning for a pandemic and natural disasters before they take place.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need IT

 

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

Even humans make mistakes

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

Infrastructures are constantly changing: your disaster recovery plan needs to change, too, to keep pace. It is important to make a note of regularly reviewing your plan and strategy. Perhaps once or twice a year, sit down and walk through how you would use the current plan to respond to a given type of disaster. This exercise will help you identify gaps that need to be addressed.

Even humans make mistakes

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

Disaster recovery plans need to be updated

Infrastructures are constantly changing: your disaster recovery plan needs to change, too, to keep pace. It is important to make a note of regularly reviewing your plan and strategy. Perhaps once or twice a year, sit down and walk through how you would use the current plan to respond to a given type of disaster. This exercise will help you identify gaps that need to be addressed.

Even humans make mistakes

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

Each scenario will have a different impact on your business. To estimate each impact, you will need to understand the inner-workings of your business. This is why, creating a DSP is very much a team effort. You will need your key members of staff with you to help you understand your business throughout, or outsource the expertise of a managed IT support service, who will ask the right questions to get you thinking about your business model.

Disaster recovery plans need to be updated

Infrastructures are constantly changing: your disaster recovery plan needs to change, too, to keep pace. It is important to make a note of regularly reviewing your plan and strategy. Perhaps once or twice a year, sit down and walk through how you would use the current plan to respond to a given type of disaster. This exercise will help you identify gaps that need to be addressed.

Even humans make mistakes

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

When you know which disasters, your business is most likely to face, you can plan accordingly. It is important to understand that the frequency, severity and predictability of a disaster can vary depending on the type. Make sure that each type has its own set of procedures, and do not use a standard plan for each scenario.

Each scenario will have a different impact on your business. To estimate each impact, you will need to understand the inner-workings of your business. This is why, creating a DSP is very much a team effort. You will need your key members of staff with you to help you understand your business throughout, or outsource the expertise of a managed IT support service, who will ask the right questions to get you thinking about your business model.

Disaster recovery plans need to be updated

Infrastructures are constantly changing: your disaster recovery plan needs to change, too, to keep pace. It is important to make a note of regularly reviewing your plan and strategy. Perhaps once or twice a year, sit down and walk through how you would use the current plan to respond to a given type of disaster. This exercise will help you identify gaps that need to be addressed.

Even humans make mistakes

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

 

 

 

 

Depending on the location, or locations, of your infrastructure, the types of disasters you are most likely to face can vary widely. If you have a data centre in a remote location, for example, power outages could be your main threat.

When you know which disasters, your business is most likely to face, you can plan accordingly. It is important to understand that the frequency, severity and predictability of a disaster can vary depending on the type. Make sure that each type has its own set of procedures, and do not use a standard plan for each scenario.

Each scenario will have a different impact on your business. To estimate each impact, you will need to understand the inner-workings of your business. This is why, creating a DSP is very much a team effort. You will need your key members of staff with you to help you understand your business throughout, or outsource the expertise of a managed IT support service, who will ask the right questions to get you thinking about your business model.

Disaster recovery plans need to be updated

Infrastructures are constantly changing: your disaster recovery plan needs to change, too, to keep pace. It is important to make a note of regularly reviewing your plan and strategy. Perhaps once or twice a year, sit down and walk through how you would use the current plan to respond to a given type of disaster. This exercise will help you identify gaps that need to be addressed.

Even humans make mistakes

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

Consider the most likely causes of disasters

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Depending on the location, or locations, of your infrastructure, the types of disasters you are most likely to face can vary widely. If you have a data centre in a remote location, for example, power outages could be your main threat.

When you know which disasters, your business is most likely to face, you can plan accordingly. It is important to understand that the frequency, severity and predictability of a disaster can vary depending on the type. Make sure that each type has its own set of procedures, and do not use a standard plan for each scenario.

Each scenario will have a different impact on your business. To estimate each impact, you will need to understand the inner-workings of your business. This is why, creating a DSP is very much a team effort. You will need your key members of staff with you to help you understand your business throughout, or outsource the expertise of a managed IT support service, who will ask the right questions to get you thinking about your business model.

Disaster recovery plans need to be updated

Infrastructures are constantly changing: your disaster recovery plan needs to change, too, to keep pace. It is important to make a note of regularly reviewing your plan and strategy. Perhaps once or twice a year, sit down and walk through how you would use the current plan to respond to a given type of disaster. This exercise will help you identify gaps that need to be addressed.

Even humans make mistakes

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

Creating an effective DRP involves detailed step-by-step procedures for restoring your business data and infrastructure after a disaster takes place. However, the plan should not just be a list of steps to get things back up and running. It should specify:

1 How quickly each task should be performed and what’s their priority for the business to continue functioning

2 How procedures may differ across a multi-site organisation, with potentially different plans for each location

3 Nominated staff members who will perform which tasks from the plan

It is also very important to think about communication. Disaster recovery is not a one-person job. The plan needs to include communication methods for each disaster your business is likely to encounter. If, for example, your main infrastructure or network fails, how will your employees access the plan? Consider keeping copies on USBs, or even printing them out. Ensure that you have a plan in place for employees to talk to each other and share information.

Consider the most likely causes of disasters

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Depending on the location, or locations, of your infrastructure, the types of disasters you are most likely to face can vary widely. If you have a data centre in a remote location, for example, power outages could be your main threat.

When you know which disasters, your business is most likely to face, you can plan accordingly. It is important to understand that the frequency, severity and predictability of a disaster can vary depending on the type. Make sure that each type has its own set of procedures, and do not use a standard plan for each scenario.

Each scenario will have a different impact on your business. To estimate each impact, you will need to understand the inner-workings of your business. This is why, creating a DSP is very much a team effort. You will need your key members of staff with you to help you understand your business throughout, or outsource the expertise of a managed IT support service, who will ask the right questions to get you thinking about your business model.

Disaster recovery plans need to be updated

Infrastructures are constantly changing: your disaster recovery plan needs to change, too, to keep pace. It is important to make a note of regularly reviewing your plan and strategy. Perhaps once or twice a year, sit down and walk through how you would use the current plan to respond to a given type of disaster. This exercise will help you identify gaps that need to be addressed.

Even humans make mistakes

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

What’s involved in creating a DRP

Creating an effective DRP involves detailed step-by-step procedures for restoring your business data and infrastructure after a disaster takes place. However, the plan should not just be a list of steps to get things back up and running. It should specify:

1 How quickly each task should be performed and what’s their priority for the business to continue functioning

2 How procedures may differ across a multi-site organisation, with potentially different plans for each location

3 Nominated staff members who will perform which tasks from the plan

It is also very important to think about communication. Disaster recovery is not a one-person job. The plan needs to include communication methods for each disaster your business is likely to encounter. If, for example, your main infrastructure or network fails, how will your employees access the plan? Consider keeping copies on USBs, or even printing them out. Ensure that you have a plan in place for employees to talk to each other and share information.

Consider the most likely causes of disasters

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Depending on the location, or locations, of your infrastructure, the types of disasters you are most likely to face can vary widely. If you have a data centre in a remote location, for example, power outages could be your main threat.

When you know which disasters, your business is most likely to face, you can plan accordingly. It is important to understand that the frequency, severity and predictability of a disaster can vary depending on the type. Make sure that each type has its own set of procedures, and do not use a standard plan for each scenario.

Each scenario will have a different impact on your business. To estimate each impact, you will need to understand the inner-workings of your business. This is why, creating a DSP is very much a team effort. You will need your key members of staff with you to help you understand your business throughout, or outsource the expertise of a managed IT support service, who will ask the right questions to get you thinking about your business model.

Disaster recovery plans need to be updated

Infrastructures are constantly changing: your disaster recovery plan needs to change, too, to keep pace. It is important to make a note of regularly reviewing your plan and strategy. Perhaps once or twice a year, sit down and walk through how you would use the current plan to respond to a given type of disaster. This exercise will help you identify gaps that need to be addressed.

Even humans make mistakes

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

Recent research showed that, even now, six months into the pandemic, 68% of small businesses and 30% of all businesses still do not have a disaster recovery plan. 90% of them also stated that they will not survive a catastrophic incident without one.

What’s involved in creating a DRP

Creating an effective DRP involves detailed step-by-step procedures for restoring your business data and infrastructure after a disaster takes place. However, the plan should not just be a list of steps to get things back up and running. It should specify:

1 How quickly each task should be performed and what’s their priority for the business to continue functioning

2 How procedures may differ across a multi-site organisation, with potentially different plans for each location

3 Nominated staff members who will perform which tasks from the plan

It is also very important to think about communication. Disaster recovery is not a one-person job. The plan needs to include communication methods for each disaster your business is likely to encounter. If, for example, your main infrastructure or network fails, how will your employees access the plan? Consider keeping copies on USBs, or even printing them out. Ensure that you have a plan in place for employees to talk to each other and share information.

Consider the most likely causes of disasters

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Depending on the location, or locations, of your infrastructure, the types of disasters you are most likely to face can vary widely. If you have a data centre in a remote location, for example, power outages could be your main threat.

When you know which disasters, your business is most likely to face, you can plan accordingly. It is important to understand that the frequency, severity and predictability of a disaster can vary depending on the type. Make sure that each type has its own set of procedures, and do not use a standard plan for each scenario.

Each scenario will have a different impact on your business. To estimate each impact, you will need to understand the inner-workings of your business. This is why, creating a DSP is very much a team effort. You will need your key members of staff with you to help you understand your business throughout, or outsource the expertise of a managed IT support service, who will ask the right questions to get you thinking about your business model.

Disaster recovery plans need to be updated

Infrastructures are constantly changing: your disaster recovery plan needs to change, too, to keep pace. It is important to make a note of regularly reviewing your plan and strategy. Perhaps once or twice a year, sit down and walk through how you would use the current plan to respond to a given type of disaster. This exercise will help you identify gaps that need to be addressed.

Even humans make mistakes

Have you ever accidentally saved over a word document or had your computer crash before you could save an important file? It happens to the best of us.

Disaster Recovery Plan: What It Is & Why You Need It

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the most cautious can forget a step in an important process. This could cause data loss or the wrong data being entered. While very common, these mistakes can often be the hardest to prevent and correct. Often, the best way to prevent human error is in process improvements and quality assurance activities. A disaster recovery plan that incorporates checking and double checking is often the best remedy, along with online backups. Having a DSP that creates a series of online data backups lets you easily restore your files to an error-free state.

The less expensive and more sensible option would be to have your data backed up regularly. Ideally, and more cost-effective than building your own top-of-the-line data centre, would be to outsource your IT infrastructure to a leading disaster recovery management service. This would eliminate any capital expenses while ensuring protection from service interruptions.

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters

No business is invulnerable to IT disasters, but speedy recovery due to a well-crafted IT disaster recovery plan is expected by today’s ever-demanding customers. Too many businesses fail because they were ill prepared for an IT disaster, even when a simple solution like online backup could have easily saved them.

While on average it is much cheaper to retain a customer then to acquire a new customer, re-acquiring an old customer after an IT disaster can be next to impossible. It takes a lot to earn customers’ trust. However, after an IT disaster like loss of data or an extended outage in service, trust quickly evaporates.

If you haven’t thought about developing an IT disaster recovery plan yet, it should be at the top of your priority list. Your business and customers demand it.

Contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 to see how we can help. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter for all the latest industry news and handy tips.

Cloud Computing: What You Need To Know

The Covid-19 pandemic has increased the importance of ‘cloud computing’ in almost all businesses, making it a vital asset for their everyday operations. It is thanks to the cloud that some businesses have been able to keep going during the lockdown, allowing them to operate remotely. Businesses already operating within the cloud will have the upper hand for digital transformation and ongoing innovation that many organisations will need to embrace in the ‘new-normal’.

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Should you move to the cloud?

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Moving your operations to the cloud requires a well-thought-out strategy. There are choices in the type of migration to perform as well as the type of data that should move. Common elements of a cloud migration strategy include the following:

– evaluation of performance and security requirements

– selection of a cloud provider

– calculation of costs

– reorganisation deemed necessary

A business may choose to move operations to the cloud without any modifications (a lift-and-shift migration). Operations move directly from local servers to the cloud without any changes. This is essentially a 1-to-1 move done primarily as a short-term fix to save on IT infrastructure costs. In other cases, it might be more beneficial to change the architecture, known as application refactoring or rearchitecting.

A poorly planned migration could affect business performance. It could lead to higher IT costs, negating some of the main benefits of cloud computing.

Are thinking of moving to the cloud? If you would like to learn more on the process involved then contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 or drop us a line at hello@codus.co.uk

Follow us on Twitter @Codus_IT for all our latest news and useful tips.

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Cost – This is one of the main benefits of moving your business operations to the cloud. There would be no need to invest in the expensive hardware and software. Also, you will no longer need to worry about the server’s maintenance. On top of this, you would be saving on your electricity expenditure and recruitment costs, by no longer needing to hire the IT expertise in-house.

Scalability – The benefits of cloud computing services include the ability to increase or decrease your resources at a moment’s notice. This would result in your business having access to the right amount of IT resources right when they are needed. Whether you are growing or downsizing, or if a business is operating nationally with a remote workforce, the services will be available right away to match the business requirements.

Productivity – By moving your IT infrastructure to the cloud, you are allowing your in-house team to focus on achieving more important business goals. They would no longer need to spend their time managing the hardware set-up, software patching and other IT management chores.

Performance – The biggest cloud computing services run on a worldwide network of secure data centres, regularly upgraded to the latest generation of hardware and offering several benefits over a single corporate data centre. Performance benefits would also include easier and less expensive data backup, disaster recovery and business continuity plans.

Security – Many cloud providers offer a broad set of policies, technologies and controls that strengthen your IT security overall, adding extra peace of mind to your data and IT infrastructure from potential cyber threats.

Should you move to the cloud?

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Moving your operations to the cloud requires a well-thought-out strategy. There are choices in the type of migration to perform as well as the type of data that should move. Common elements of a cloud migration strategy include the following:

– evaluation of performance and security requirements

– selection of a cloud provider

– calculation of costs

– reorganisation deemed necessary

A business may choose to move operations to the cloud without any modifications (a lift-and-shift migration). Operations move directly from local servers to the cloud without any changes. This is essentially a 1-to-1 move done primarily as a short-term fix to save on IT infrastructure costs. In other cases, it might be more beneficial to change the architecture, known as application refactoring or rearchitecting.

A poorly planned migration could affect business performance. It could lead to higher IT costs, negating some of the main benefits of cloud computing.

Are thinking of moving to the cloud? If you would like to learn more on the process involved then contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 or drop us a line at hello@codus.co.uk

Follow us on Twitter @Codus_IT for all our latest news and useful tips.

The benefits of cloud computing

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Cost – This is one of the main benefits of moving your business operations to the cloud. There would be no need to invest in the expensive hardware and software. Also, you will no longer need to worry about the server’s maintenance. On top of this, you would be saving on your electricity expenditure and recruitment costs, by no longer needing to hire the IT expertise in-house.

Scalability – The benefits of cloud computing services include the ability to increase or decrease your resources at a moment’s notice. This would result in your business having access to the right amount of IT resources right when they are needed. Whether you are growing or downsizing, or if a business is operating nationally with a remote workforce, the services will be available right away to match the business requirements.

Productivity – By moving your IT infrastructure to the cloud, you are allowing your in-house team to focus on achieving more important business goals. They would no longer need to spend their time managing the hardware set-up, software patching and other IT management chores.

Performance – The biggest cloud computing services run on a worldwide network of secure data centres, regularly upgraded to the latest generation of hardware and offering several benefits over a single corporate data centre. Performance benefits would also include easier and less expensive data backup, disaster recovery and business continuity plans.

Security – Many cloud providers offer a broad set of policies, technologies and controls that strengthen your IT security overall, adding extra peace of mind to your data and IT infrastructure from potential cyber threats.

Should you move to the cloud?

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Moving your operations to the cloud requires a well-thought-out strategy. There are choices in the type of migration to perform as well as the type of data that should move. Common elements of a cloud migration strategy include the following:

– evaluation of performance and security requirements

– selection of a cloud provider

– calculation of costs

– reorganisation deemed necessary

A business may choose to move operations to the cloud without any modifications (a lift-and-shift migration). Operations move directly from local servers to the cloud without any changes. This is essentially a 1-to-1 move done primarily as a short-term fix to save on IT infrastructure costs. In other cases, it might be more beneficial to change the architecture, known as application refactoring or rearchitecting.

A poorly planned migration could affect business performance. It could lead to higher IT costs, negating some of the main benefits of cloud computing.

Are thinking of moving to the cloud? If you would like to learn more on the process involved then contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 or drop us a line at hello@codus.co.uk

Follow us on Twitter @Codus_IT for all our latest news and useful tips.

There are three main types of cloud computing: public, private and hybrid.

Public Cloud – A public cloud is owned and operated by third-party service providers. They will own and manage all the IT infrastructure, including hardware and software. You will have user access to the services and will be able to manage your account using a web browser.

Private Cloud – A private cloud refers to cloud computing resources used exclusively by a single business. This is maintained on a private network and can either be physically located on-site or hosted by a third-party service provider.

Hybrid Cloud – A hybrid cloud combines public and private settings, linked together by technology that allows data and applications to be shared between them. This type of set-up can bring greater flexibility to a business with optimised infrastructure, security and compliance.

The benefits of cloud computing

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Cost – This is one of the main benefits of moving your business operations to the cloud. There would be no need to invest in the expensive hardware and software. Also, you will no longer need to worry about the server’s maintenance. On top of this, you would be saving on your electricity expenditure and recruitment costs, by no longer needing to hire the IT expertise in-house.

Scalability – The benefits of cloud computing services include the ability to increase or decrease your resources at a moment’s notice. This would result in your business having access to the right amount of IT resources right when they are needed. Whether you are growing or downsizing, or if a business is operating nationally with a remote workforce, the services will be available right away to match the business requirements.

Productivity – By moving your IT infrastructure to the cloud, you are allowing your in-house team to focus on achieving more important business goals. They would no longer need to spend their time managing the hardware set-up, software patching and other IT management chores.

Performance – The biggest cloud computing services run on a worldwide network of secure data centres, regularly upgraded to the latest generation of hardware and offering several benefits over a single corporate data centre. Performance benefits would also include easier and less expensive data backup, disaster recovery and business continuity plans.

Security – Many cloud providers offer a broad set of policies, technologies and controls that strengthen your IT security overall, adding extra peace of mind to your data and IT infrastructure from potential cyber threats.

Should you move to the cloud?

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Moving your operations to the cloud requires a well-thought-out strategy. There are choices in the type of migration to perform as well as the type of data that should move. Common elements of a cloud migration strategy include the following:

– evaluation of performance and security requirements

– selection of a cloud provider

– calculation of costs

– reorganisation deemed necessary

A business may choose to move operations to the cloud without any modifications (a lift-and-shift migration). Operations move directly from local servers to the cloud without any changes. This is essentially a 1-to-1 move done primarily as a short-term fix to save on IT infrastructure costs. In other cases, it might be more beneficial to change the architecture, known as application refactoring or rearchitecting.

A poorly planned migration could affect business performance. It could lead to higher IT costs, negating some of the main benefits of cloud computing.

Are thinking of moving to the cloud? If you would like to learn more on the process involved then contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 or drop us a line at hello@codus.co.uk

Follow us on Twitter @Codus_IT for all our latest news and useful tips.

Different types of cloud computing

There are three main types of cloud computing: public, private and hybrid.

Public Cloud – A public cloud is owned and operated by third-party service providers. They will own and manage all the IT infrastructure, including hardware and software. You will have user access to the services and will be able to manage your account using a web browser.

Private Cloud – A private cloud refers to cloud computing resources used exclusively by a single business. This is maintained on a private network and can either be physically located on-site or hosted by a third-party service provider.

Hybrid Cloud – A hybrid cloud combines public and private settings, linked together by technology that allows data and applications to be shared between them. This type of set-up can bring greater flexibility to a business with optimised infrastructure, security and compliance.

The benefits of cloud computing

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Cost – This is one of the main benefits of moving your business operations to the cloud. There would be no need to invest in the expensive hardware and software. Also, you will no longer need to worry about the server’s maintenance. On top of this, you would be saving on your electricity expenditure and recruitment costs, by no longer needing to hire the IT expertise in-house.

Scalability – The benefits of cloud computing services include the ability to increase or decrease your resources at a moment’s notice. This would result in your business having access to the right amount of IT resources right when they are needed. Whether you are growing or downsizing, or if a business is operating nationally with a remote workforce, the services will be available right away to match the business requirements.

Productivity – By moving your IT infrastructure to the cloud, you are allowing your in-house team to focus on achieving more important business goals. They would no longer need to spend their time managing the hardware set-up, software patching and other IT management chores.

Performance – The biggest cloud computing services run on a worldwide network of secure data centres, regularly upgraded to the latest generation of hardware and offering several benefits over a single corporate data centre. Performance benefits would also include easier and less expensive data backup, disaster recovery and business continuity plans.

Security – Many cloud providers offer a broad set of policies, technologies and controls that strengthen your IT security overall, adding extra peace of mind to your data and IT infrastructure from potential cyber threats.

Should you move to the cloud?

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Moving your operations to the cloud requires a well-thought-out strategy. There are choices in the type of migration to perform as well as the type of data that should move. Common elements of a cloud migration strategy include the following:

– evaluation of performance and security requirements

– selection of a cloud provider

– calculation of costs

– reorganisation deemed necessary

A business may choose to move operations to the cloud without any modifications (a lift-and-shift migration). Operations move directly from local servers to the cloud without any changes. This is essentially a 1-to-1 move done primarily as a short-term fix to save on IT infrastructure costs. In other cases, it might be more beneficial to change the architecture, known as application refactoring or rearchitecting.

A poorly planned migration could affect business performance. It could lead to higher IT costs, negating some of the main benefits of cloud computing.

Are thinking of moving to the cloud? If you would like to learn more on the process involved then contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 or drop us a line at hello@codus.co.uk

Follow us on Twitter @Codus_IT for all our latest news and useful tips.

Cloud migration is the process of transferring data, applications and other business elements to a cloud computing online environment. So, computing services such as servers, storage, databases, networking and software will be hosted online (on the cloud). This will offer faster innovation and flexible resources.

Different types of cloud computing

There are three main types of cloud computing: public, private and hybrid.

Public Cloud – A public cloud is owned and operated by third-party service providers. They will own and manage all the IT infrastructure, including hardware and software. You will have user access to the services and will be able to manage your account using a web browser.

Private Cloud – A private cloud refers to cloud computing resources used exclusively by a single business. This is maintained on a private network and can either be physically located on-site or hosted by a third-party service provider.

Hybrid Cloud – A hybrid cloud combines public and private settings, linked together by technology that allows data and applications to be shared between them. This type of set-up can bring greater flexibility to a business with optimised infrastructure, security and compliance.

The benefits of cloud computing

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Cost – This is one of the main benefits of moving your business operations to the cloud. There would be no need to invest in the expensive hardware and software. Also, you will no longer need to worry about the server’s maintenance. On top of this, you would be saving on your electricity expenditure and recruitment costs, by no longer needing to hire the IT expertise in-house.

Scalability – The benefits of cloud computing services include the ability to increase or decrease your resources at a moment’s notice. This would result in your business having access to the right amount of IT resources right when they are needed. Whether you are growing or downsizing, or if a business is operating nationally with a remote workforce, the services will be available right away to match the business requirements.

Productivity – By moving your IT infrastructure to the cloud, you are allowing your in-house team to focus on achieving more important business goals. They would no longer need to spend their time managing the hardware set-up, software patching and other IT management chores.

Performance – The biggest cloud computing services run on a worldwide network of secure data centres, regularly upgraded to the latest generation of hardware and offering several benefits over a single corporate data centre. Performance benefits would also include easier and less expensive data backup, disaster recovery and business continuity plans.

Security – Many cloud providers offer a broad set of policies, technologies and controls that strengthen your IT security overall, adding extra peace of mind to your data and IT infrastructure from potential cyber threats.

Should you move to the cloud?

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Moving your operations to the cloud requires a well-thought-out strategy. There are choices in the type of migration to perform as well as the type of data that should move. Common elements of a cloud migration strategy include the following:

– evaluation of performance and security requirements

– selection of a cloud provider

– calculation of costs

– reorganisation deemed necessary

A business may choose to move operations to the cloud without any modifications (a lift-and-shift migration). Operations move directly from local servers to the cloud without any changes. This is essentially a 1-to-1 move done primarily as a short-term fix to save on IT infrastructure costs. In other cases, it might be more beneficial to change the architecture, known as application refactoring or rearchitecting.

A poorly planned migration could affect business performance. It could lead to higher IT costs, negating some of the main benefits of cloud computing.

Are thinking of moving to the cloud? If you would like to learn more on the process involved then contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 or drop us a line at hello@codus.co.uk

Follow us on Twitter @Codus_IT for all our latest news and useful tips.

What is Cloud Migration?

Cloud migration is the process of transferring data, applications and other business elements to a cloud computing online environment. So, computing services such as servers, storage, databases, networking and software will be hosted online (on the cloud). This will offer faster innovation and flexible resources.

Different types of cloud computing

There are three main types of cloud computing: public, private and hybrid.

Public Cloud – A public cloud is owned and operated by third-party service providers. They will own and manage all the IT infrastructure, including hardware and software. You will have user access to the services and will be able to manage your account using a web browser.

Private Cloud – A private cloud refers to cloud computing resources used exclusively by a single business. This is maintained on a private network and can either be physically located on-site or hosted by a third-party service provider.

Hybrid Cloud – A hybrid cloud combines public and private settings, linked together by technology that allows data and applications to be shared between them. This type of set-up can bring greater flexibility to a business with optimised infrastructure, security and compliance.

The benefits of cloud computing

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Cost – This is one of the main benefits of moving your business operations to the cloud. There would be no need to invest in the expensive hardware and software. Also, you will no longer need to worry about the server’s maintenance. On top of this, you would be saving on your electricity expenditure and recruitment costs, by no longer needing to hire the IT expertise in-house.

Scalability – The benefits of cloud computing services include the ability to increase or decrease your resources at a moment’s notice. This would result in your business having access to the right amount of IT resources right when they are needed. Whether you are growing or downsizing, or if a business is operating nationally with a remote workforce, the services will be available right away to match the business requirements.

Productivity – By moving your IT infrastructure to the cloud, you are allowing your in-house team to focus on achieving more important business goals. They would no longer need to spend their time managing the hardware set-up, software patching and other IT management chores.

Performance – The biggest cloud computing services run on a worldwide network of secure data centres, regularly upgraded to the latest generation of hardware and offering several benefits over a single corporate data centre. Performance benefits would also include easier and less expensive data backup, disaster recovery and business continuity plans.

Security – Many cloud providers offer a broad set of policies, technologies and controls that strengthen your IT security overall, adding extra peace of mind to your data and IT infrastructure from potential cyber threats.

Should you move to the cloud?

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Moving your operations to the cloud requires a well-thought-out strategy. There are choices in the type of migration to perform as well as the type of data that should move. Common elements of a cloud migration strategy include the following:

– evaluation of performance and security requirements

– selection of a cloud provider

– calculation of costs

– reorganisation deemed necessary

A business may choose to move operations to the cloud without any modifications (a lift-and-shift migration). Operations move directly from local servers to the cloud without any changes. This is essentially a 1-to-1 move done primarily as a short-term fix to save on IT infrastructure costs. In other cases, it might be more beneficial to change the architecture, known as application refactoring or rearchitecting.

A poorly planned migration could affect business performance. It could lead to higher IT costs, negating some of the main benefits of cloud computing.

Are thinking of moving to the cloud? If you would like to learn more on the process involved then contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 or drop us a line at hello@codus.co.uk

Follow us on Twitter @Codus_IT for all our latest news and useful tips.

A recent study (Cloud 2025: The future of workloads in a cloud-first, post-COVID-19 world) conducted between May and June this year (2020), highlighted that while the full picture is still evolving, Covid-19 has become a powerful catalyst for cloud migration. The study also revealed that 87% of IT decision makers strongly believe that coronavirus is the reason cloud migration will be accelerated. Nearly three quarters of the respondents stating that the next five years will see 95% of workloads being moved to the cloud. So, if you are still new to the term ‘cloud’, here are some key facts you need to know.

What is Cloud Migration?

Cloud migration is the process of transferring data, applications and other business elements to a cloud computing online environment. So, computing services such as servers, storage, databases, networking and software will be hosted online (on the cloud). This will offer faster innovation and flexible resources.

Different types of cloud computing

There are three main types of cloud computing: public, private and hybrid.

Public Cloud – A public cloud is owned and operated by third-party service providers. They will own and manage all the IT infrastructure, including hardware and software. You will have user access to the services and will be able to manage your account using a web browser.

Private Cloud – A private cloud refers to cloud computing resources used exclusively by a single business. This is maintained on a private network and can either be physically located on-site or hosted by a third-party service provider.

Hybrid Cloud – A hybrid cloud combines public and private settings, linked together by technology that allows data and applications to be shared between them. This type of set-up can bring greater flexibility to a business with optimised infrastructure, security and compliance.

The benefits of cloud computing

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Cost – This is one of the main benefits of moving your business operations to the cloud. There would be no need to invest in the expensive hardware and software. Also, you will no longer need to worry about the server’s maintenance. On top of this, you would be saving on your electricity expenditure and recruitment costs, by no longer needing to hire the IT expertise in-house.

Scalability – The benefits of cloud computing services include the ability to increase or decrease your resources at a moment’s notice. This would result in your business having access to the right amount of IT resources right when they are needed. Whether you are growing or downsizing, or if a business is operating nationally with a remote workforce, the services will be available right away to match the business requirements.

Productivity – By moving your IT infrastructure to the cloud, you are allowing your in-house team to focus on achieving more important business goals. They would no longer need to spend their time managing the hardware set-up, software patching and other IT management chores.

Performance – The biggest cloud computing services run on a worldwide network of secure data centres, regularly upgraded to the latest generation of hardware and offering several benefits over a single corporate data centre. Performance benefits would also include easier and less expensive data backup, disaster recovery and business continuity plans.

Security – Many cloud providers offer a broad set of policies, technologies and controls that strengthen your IT security overall, adding extra peace of mind to your data and IT infrastructure from potential cyber threats.

Should you move to the cloud?

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Moving your operations to the cloud requires a well-thought-out strategy. There are choices in the type of migration to perform as well as the type of data that should move. Common elements of a cloud migration strategy include the following:

– evaluation of performance and security requirements

– selection of a cloud provider

– calculation of costs

– reorganisation deemed necessary

A business may choose to move operations to the cloud without any modifications (a lift-and-shift migration). Operations move directly from local servers to the cloud without any changes. This is essentially a 1-to-1 move done primarily as a short-term fix to save on IT infrastructure costs. In other cases, it might be more beneficial to change the architecture, known as application refactoring or rearchitecting.

A poorly planned migration could affect business performance. It could lead to higher IT costs, negating some of the main benefits of cloud computing.

Are thinking of moving to the cloud? If you would like to learn more on the process involved then contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 or drop us a line at hello@codus.co.uk

Follow us on Twitter @Codus_IT for all our latest news and useful tips.

A recent study (Cloud 2025: The future of workloads in a cloud-first, post-COVID-19 world) conducted between May and June this year (2020), highlighted that while the full picture is still evolving, Covid-19 has become a powerful catalyst for cloud migration. The study also revealed that 87% of IT decision makers strongly believe that coronavirus is the reason cloud migration will be accelerated. Nearly three quarters of the respondents stating that the next five years will see 95% of workloads being moved to the cloud. So, if you are still new to the term ‘cloud’, here are some key facts you need to know.

What is Cloud Migration?

Cloud migration is the process of transferring data, applications and other business elements to a cloud computing online environment. So, computing services such as servers, storage, databases, networking and software will be hosted online (on the cloud). This will offer faster innovation and flexible resources.

Different types of cloud computing

There are three main types of cloud computing: public, private and hybrid.

Public Cloud – A public cloud is owned and operated by third-party service providers. They will own and manage all the IT infrastructure, including hardware and software. You will have user access to the services and will be able to manage your account using a web browser.

Private Cloud – A private cloud refers to cloud computing resources used exclusively by a single business. This is maintained on a private network and can either be physically located on-site or hosted by a third-party service provider.

Hybrid Cloud – A hybrid cloud combines public and private settings, linked together by technology that allows data and applications to be shared between them. This type of set-up can bring greater flexibility to a business with optimised infrastructure, security and compliance.

The benefits of cloud computing

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Cost – This is one of the main benefits of moving your business operations to the cloud. There would be no need to invest in the expensive hardware and software. Also, you will no longer need to worry about the server’s maintenance. On top of this, you would be saving on your electricity expenditure and recruitment costs, by no longer needing to hire the IT expertise in-house.

Scalability – The benefits of cloud computing services include the ability to increase or decrease your resources at a moment’s notice. This would result in your business having access to the right amount of IT resources right when they are needed. Whether you are growing or downsizing, or if a business is operating nationally with a remote workforce, the services will be available right away to match the business requirements.

Productivity – By moving your IT infrastructure to the cloud, you are allowing your in-house team to focus on achieving more important business goals. They would no longer need to spend their time managing the hardware set-up, software patching and other IT management chores.

Performance – The biggest cloud computing services run on a worldwide network of secure data centres, regularly upgraded to the latest generation of hardware and offering several benefits over a single corporate data centre. Performance benefits would also include easier and less expensive data backup, disaster recovery and business continuity plans.

Security – Many cloud providers offer a broad set of policies, technologies and controls that strengthen your IT security overall, adding extra peace of mind to your data and IT infrastructure from potential cyber threats.

Should you move to the cloud?

Cloud Computing – What You Need To Know

Moving your operations to the cloud requires a well-thought-out strategy. There are choices in the type of migration to perform as well as the type of data that should move. Common elements of a cloud migration strategy include the following:

– evaluation of performance and security requirements

– selection of a cloud provider

– calculation of costs

– reorganisation deemed necessary

A business may choose to move operations to the cloud without any modifications (a lift-and-shift migration). Operations move directly from local servers to the cloud without any changes. This is essentially a 1-to-1 move done primarily as a short-term fix to save on IT infrastructure costs. In other cases, it might be more beneficial to change the architecture, known as application refactoring or rearchitecting.

A poorly planned migration could affect business performance. It could lead to higher IT costs, negating some of the main benefits of cloud computing.

Are thinking of moving to the cloud? If you would like to learn more on the process involved then contact our expert team on 0161 763 4529 or drop us a line at hello@codus.co.uk

Follow us on Twitter @Codus_IT for all our latest news and useful tips.

Outsourced IT Support: What Are The Benefits?

Outsourced IT support has been a hot topic since the lockdown started in March. Suddenly, businesses found themselves having to relocate their daily working environment, needing quick support to maintain their workforce running with the least amount of disruption possible. Unfortunately, this also came with the dreaded ‘furlough’ term, having to run their business on limited numbers whilst trying to maintain, or in some cases increase, their IT requirements. 

Outsourced IT Support Manchester Lancashire

Managers found themselves having to worry about providing their teams with the right devices and tools to work from home. This came with the worry of online and data security, how they would access company information and how could they stay connected and communicate effectively as a team.

This has caused many business owners to consider outsourcing their IT support, not only to reduce labour costs, but also to have the right expertise, flexibility and resources available as soon as required.

Codus Outsourced IT Support

Here at Codus we have been supporting companies across the North West with their IT requirements for over 10 years. And when they needed us the most, we were there every step of the way. Below we have listed what we believe are the key benefits our customers are experiencing from outsourcing their IT support.

Outsourced IT Support: expertise, versatility and scalability

As your business changes and evolves, so should your IT support. An in-house service may not necessarily be geared up to assist with rapid changes. They may also lack the expertise to keep up with a growth strategy. By outsourcing, you are opening your organisation to a level of capability which is costly to create internally, with an adaptable knowledge base ready to assist you and your employees whatever the direction required.

Outsourced IT Support: control service costs and reduce labour costs

Often, businesses with in-house IT support don’t realise that they are potentially paying for a skill they don’t require. When you employ an individual, you pay a salary that covers their education level and experience, even if you may only end up using 50% of what they know. Also, once you consider hardware expenses, software licenses, cloud service subscriptions, and maintenance costs, outsourced solutions start to look more and more attractive.

By outsourcing, you only pay for what you need. You reduce internal labour costs whilst also becoming more efficient with your IT budget. Your IT costs will be controlled by a set budget with the flexibility to increase the level required and quick access to skills for one-off projects.

Codus Outsourced IT Support North West

Outsourced IT Support: increased efficiency and access to new technologies

Outsourcing your IT support will bring increased efficiency. This will allow you to concentrate on the core of your business without having to worry about IT recruitment, what systems to invest in, appraisals and development programmes, as well as potential worry on how you will be able to support your team if you don’t necessarily fully understand their role and duties. A quality outsourced IT service company will have the resources to start new projects right away. This will allow you to spend your precious time on your business and customers. Additionally, a proactive supplier will notify you of any new technologies that could bring benefits to your ways of working, with efficiency and security always a priority.

Outsourced IT Support: compliance, security and reduced risks

Online security is such a hot topic right now, and majority of businesses who are safe will most likely outsource their IT support. A service company will make it their priority to make sure your business is up to date on all security matters, and compliant with all current legislation. This links back to the above point, of allowing you to do what you do best without having to worry about your business and data security. 

Codus Outsourced IT Support Manchester

All the benefits and advantages we have mentioned above point to one major goal – allowing you and your employees to focus on your business.

At Codus we specialise in supporting companies within the architectural, planning and construction sector. We provide proactive IT support matched with a high level of customer service practised by all members of our team. We believe in not only answering your requirements, but also assisting in constantly discovering new ways of working, helping you grow and maintain a competitive edge.

To find out more about our Managed IT Support, Digital Solutions and Cyber Security simply call us on 0161 763 4529. Also follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter @Codus_IT for regular tips and advice.

Successful Cyber Essentials Accreditation for AFL Architects

Here at Codus we are proud to share that we have recently supported our client AFL Architects in successfully gaining their Cyber Essentials accreditation.

What Is Cyber Essentials?

AFL Architects Cyber Essentials

A Cyber Essentials accreditation is a Government-backed, industry-supported scheme to help organisations protect themselves against common online threats and demonstrate their commitment to their cyber security.

AFL Architects, an international architectural, masterplanning and interior design practice based in Manchester, are a long-standing Codus customer. We fully understand their vision, ways of working and systems in place, making us the perfect partner to assist with the certification.

As a leading architectural practice, AFL Architects will now enjoy some key benefits from having a Cyber Essential accreditation:

  • They will be able to reassure customers on their commitment to IT security and protection against cyber attack
  • They will attract new business who care about a supplier’s cyber security measures
  • They have a clear picture of their organisation’s cyber security level

We would like to thank you the team at AFL Architects for their continued business, it is a pleasure to support you on your mission to create lasting places for our communities.

IT Security At Codus

IT and Online Security Codus

The way we work at Codus is very precise. When we are first contacted by a customer we carry out a full system audit, giving us details on what is already in place. Follwing the audit we make detailed recoomendations on how we can make the IT more efficient for the business. We take great care of your systems, data and online security, with a proactive approach by our team in always recommenting new ways of working that would bring efficinecy to your business. In turn this would make us a great partner for future projects such as a Cyber Essentials accreditation.

To find out more on our range of service sumply contact our team on 0161 763 4529. Also follow us on Twitter @Codus_IT for all our latest updates and useful IT tips.