
Planning Disaster Recovery: An Atlanta Business Guide
A lot of Atlanta organizations think about disaster recovery only when a storm knocks out power, a ransomware note lands on a server, or a

A lot of Atlanta organizations think about disaster recovery only when a storm knocks out power, a ransomware note lands on a server, or a

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,