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Disaster Recovery

Disaster Recovery is about People, Processes AND Technology.

AximCloud Disaster Recovery (DR) offering powered by AWS

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Ensure your organization can continue operations in service of your customers in the event of any disruption (Cyberattack, Ransomware, etc.). AximCloud can create or evaluate your existing business continuity plan including the processes, people, and technology. We will define the capabilities of your existing recovery solution, identify any gaps, or risks, and design a more rapid, accurate and measurably stable failover environment should an unforeseen event make the PROD infrastructure unavailable.

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Leverage AximCloud’s global engineering team and at least two of AWS’s global data centers to ensure that your Disaster Recovery Environment is designed according to established best practices and adheres to the AWS Well-Architected Framework. We will analyze your current IT infrastructure, applications, and data, and based on your recovery requirements and objectives (RPO/RTO) build the most cost-effective Pilot Light/Warm Standby solution that satisfies your requirements. Our SREs don’t stop at the design phase, they will build the solution, test the solution again and again in order to guarantee the speed and reliability level of service. Rest assured that our engineering team that designs, builds and tests the DRE, is the same team that will be managing and supporting the environment 24/7.

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Optimize your disaster recovery strategy

 

AximCloud on (AWS) helps you minimize the impact of testing and recovery through automation, and streamlining.  We proactively manage and audit DR deployments via rapid and continuous test cycles.   Implementation of a Business Continuance Plan (BCP), and/or a Disaster Recovery Environment (DRE) entails a set of procedures and policies enabling business and data processing workflows to recover and continue to function following a disaster (either natural or man-made). These events may include (but not be limited to) hardware or software failures, network communication failures, power outages, damage to a physical infrastructure (read: buildings) e.g., fire / flooding, human error or natural disasters.

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