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Debating the Need for Office 365 Backup

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The Great Debate, Hosted by AvePoint

In August, I wrote a review of a document issued by a well-known backup vendor proclaiming six reasons why backing up Office 365 is critical. My conclusion was that the document was full of FUD (fear, uncertainty, and doubt) designed to convince unwary Office 365 tenant administrators that they should invest in an expensive third-party backup solution.

Soon afterwards, AvePoint (not the vendor in question) contacted me to ask if would be willing to debate the issues around Office 365 backup with John Hodges, VP of product strategy at AvePoint. I have no problem in setting out why I think people need to eliminate the FUD surrounding this topic before deciding about backups, so I agreed. The debate takes place tomorrow, Wednesday October 7 at 10AM EST. Attendance is free. You can register to attend online and join the fun. AvePoint also plan to stream the debate live on their LinkedIn page.

Topics to Debate

I’m sure we’ll touch on many important (but sometimes misunderstood) topics like:

Time to Restore Service

Developing the last point, situations like the recent Azure Active Directory outage invariably cause a chorus of criticism from cloud unbelievers and advocates of backups, especially when issues with a fundamental cloud service cuts access to popular applications like Exchange Online, SharePoint Online, or Teams. While the Azure Active Directory issue played out, I saw some silly comments by people who should know better that email traffic could be rerouted to another server. Such advice should be consigned to the wastebasket on the basis that:

The Future Role for Backup Services

Don’t get me wrong. I think backup services and solutions have a role to play inside the Office 365 ecosystem. Microsoft’s tools can be overcomplicated and hard to use to restore data, especially on a highly granular basis. There’s lots of scope to come up with new ways to visualize the important data used in a tenant, protect that data by copying some or all of it to a separate location, and delivering easy ways for tenant administrators to access and restore information quickly and efficiently.

The old-style backup techniques developed for on-premises environments and brought into the cloud are not what’s needed. There’s too much data in cloud services and too many points of interconnection and dependencies to keep on using the “let’s stream data out of Exchange or SharePoint” approach that I see in so many offerings.

Come join us at the debate. I can promise nothing except some arguments. Let’s hope that the moderator maintains control and the participants remain cheerful and polite!


Update: You can access a recording of the debate online. I think AvePoint did a nice job of setting up and running the debate and I look forward to using this format to debate other issues in the future.

Figure 1: The Great Backup Debate
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