
Master Disaster and Recovery Planning for IT Assets
A lot of disaster and recovery planning still lives in the data center diagram. Backups are mapped. Failover is documented. Cloud recovery gets attention. Then

A lot of disaster and recovery planning still lives in the data center diagram. Backups are mapped. Failover is documented. Cloud recovery gets attention. Then

A lot of Atlanta IT teams are facing the same uncomfortable moment right now. A lease is ending, a server room is being cleared, a

Old office tech rarely leaves all at once. It piles up. A few retired laptops sit in a cabinet after a hardware refresh. An old

On a normal Atlanta workday, the incident that throws your business off balance usually isn’t dramatic. It’s a failed UPS in a server closet. A

A lot of disaster plans look solid until the first real incident hits the building instead of the network. A burst pipe above the server

Your storage room probably looks familiar. A stack of retired laptops. A few monitors from the last office refresh. Printers nobody wants. Maybe a box

A lot of disaster recovery plans look complete until the day a real incident hits. A clinic in Atlanta loses access to patient files after

A lot of disaster recovery planning fails in the same place. The backup works, the failover starts, and everyone focuses on bringing systems back online

That back-room closet usually tells the truth before any audit does. You open the door to grab one spare monitor and find six retired laptops,

Your backup failed over. Email is running from the cloud. Teams can message. Leadership thinks the disaster recovery plan worked. Then facilities opens the server