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The case for off-site data storage

The case for off-site data storage

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 20 Aug 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Read why a Toronto-based wealth management firm thinks its newly implemented online backup system is a necessity in the operation its business

Backing up your data off-site, regardless of the storage system you use in-house, should be a best practice that both large and small companies follow, according to the head of the Levine Financial Group.

Up until recently, the Toronto-based insurance and wealth management firm was using a tape-based storage system as one of its primary data backup devices. The company has now turned to an online backup system for an added level of protection and piece of mind.

“We have two back-up systems that we continue to use; we have mirrored disks on our server and we have tapes that we take home at night,” Elliott Levine, director at Levine Financials, said. “But we didn’t think that was the right way to operate in the 21st century, so we looked for an off-site provider that could basically act as a redundant system for us.”

 

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To implement the system, Levine Financial hired Toronto-based storage provider Storagepipe Solutions after being impressed with its security, systems and staff. And while Levine Financial has only been a customer for one year, the wealth management company said it’s already had to use the service.

“Very early on in the agreement, we ran into a situation where we had to get a backup of some data very quickly,” Levine said. “We gave them a call and I’d say within minutes, the file was e-mailed to us.”

According to Storagepipe, the biggest benefit of using an off-site, hosted storage system is that it typically removes the responsibility of IT departments to do backups themselves.

“Most small companies don’t even have IT departments,” Steven Rodin, president at Storagepipe, said. “It’s often just a person in the company handling the tape storage, who probably isn’t a back-up recovery specialist. So, in many small businesses, manual and human error becomes a significant concern.”

 

 

Rodin said his clients can choose to have continuous data protection services – which scans and backups a company’s systems immediately upon a change – or they can opt for a nightly backup schedule. The automated nature of Storagepipe’s backup administration was particularly important to Levine and his decision to choose the service provider.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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