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How to go about
the Backup Software Purchase Decision?
Buying
backup may be a daunting task even to the most experienced software
specialist. Search engines provide a good source of information,
however, do you have time to scour millions of search results?
Most search engines rank these results on commercial basis rather
than on the software requirements of their users. Are you willing
to trust one of your most valuable possessions - your data -
to rankings based on everything else other than you data protection
requirements. This article introduces you to a method designed
to assist you in buying backup software and making sure that
you feel secure that your data is protected.
The purchase decision of such specialist
software as backup may be a daunting task simply because
you may be looking at the problem from the "I-want-to-backup-my-data"
perspective. However, is data backup the real prevention to
data loss? Is data backup the real solution for you? Or is it
the ability to reproduce the original data in its original uncorrupted
state prior to disaster or adverse conditions?
As Jon Surmacz of CIO Magazine reports, "storing
data is the easy part; recovering data is another story".
To ensure continuity we usually advise customers to look
at the problem of data loss due to disaster from the perspective
of being able to restore the original data with 100% accuracy.
Such a perspective also dictates the dire need
for defining what kind of data is at risk, what level of expertise
you have, your outlay in buying backup software, the amount
of money required to maintain consistent and regular backups,
what are your exact requirements and, finally, analyzing the
competitive offerings available in view of all these issues.
People
who have a systematic methodology for assessing these
competitive offerings are more liable to choose the
right backup software than those that do not.
Such methodology consists of analyzing and ranking
vendors across the industry-standard attributes of backup software
- those of "ease of use", "cost of
ownership", "performance", "reliability",
"depth of features", and "breadth of
coverage".
People often tackle the problem of buying software
that they have little or know expertise about by 'googling'.
Looking for generic search terms (e.g., backup software)
is highly convenient - people then usually select the product
that either looks as if it will do the trick (i.e., backup)
or it is reasonably priced. However, grave mistakes are committed
when you decide solely on the basis of cursory product impressions
and price.
You must think and act beyond price and search
engine rankings. For example, I have just googled "backup
software" and returned 111 million matches.
The first company to appear is Veritas Software
- this company is one of the largest and most impressive technology
companies in the market today. However, it produces top-notch
backup software that is used by large companies but is guaranteed
to burn a hole in your pocket if you are a home user or a small
business. Not only is the capital outlay inaccesible (in the
$000s) but installing and running the software requires specialist
knowledge.
So, before turning to the convenience of
the web, we always suggest that you formalize your requirements
down to the minutest detail by defining:
- The nature of data is at risk - is it emails?
Is it digital photographs? For example, this effects the size
of the storage devices required to store your back up files.
- What data is most valuable and mission-critical.
This could range from emails to family photos to sensitive
financial data depending upon your situation.
- How frequently you wish to perform backups.
- What storage devices you will use to store
your backed up data.
- What kind of guarantees you require from
your backup software and what level of accuracy would you
be happy with.
- What is your level of expertise i.e. you
don't mind having complex user interfaces and minimial assistance
from the vendor.
- What's your budget to buy the software and
how much are you willing to spend on running the software
in terms, for example, of DVDs and CDs to store the backup
files.
These are all elements of a well-crafted
backup strategy that will provide you with the foundations
for building specification sheets that describe your data
protection and continuity requirements.

At the end of the day, backup software is like
taking out an insurance policy on your data. And when buying
insurance, people have well thought-out plans and details of
what they need and it is only on the basis of these plans and
details that they seek out policy providers automatically weeding
out those who are not compatible for one reason or another.
People who that start their buying process by
recognizing that the problem of purchasing backup is really
one of developing a strategy that ensures full and accurate
recovery of data (thus, continuity) in times of adverse conditions,
are almost assured of an excellent choice.
The more popular methodology for analyzing
competing brands is to define the main attributes used by the
industry to describe its offerings and to examine the product
features of each brand in the light of these attributes.
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