A backup and recovery plan is something many small businesses only think about after a problem happens. However, even a simple plan can make a big difference if files are deleted, a device fails, a system goes down, or the business is affected by a cyber incident.

The first step is to decide which information is most important. For most small businesses, this may include customer records, finance documents, emails, shared files, website data, project files, and any software used for daily operations.

The next step is to decide how often backups should take place. Some businesses may only need daily backups, while others may need more frequent protection depending on how often their data changes.

A good backup and recovery plan should include:

1. A list of important business data
2. A regular backup schedule
3. Secure cloud or off-site storage
4. Access control for backup files
5. Regular restore testing
6. A clear recovery process
7. Contact details for the person or team responsible

One important point is testing. Having backups is not enough if the business does not know whether files can be restored properly. Regular testing helps confirm that the backup process is working and that important data can be recovered when needed.

A backup and recovery plan does not need to be complicated. It just needs to be reliable, tested, and easy to follow when something goes wrong.

Shared by Sprint Integration, a UK IT support provider helping businesses with managed IT support, cyber security, cloud solutions, backup, and disaster recovery.