Veeam Software, the leader in Modern Data Protection, today released findings of the company's fourth annual
Data Protection Trends Report
to better understand how data protection is evolving in a digital
world. The survey found that companies are challenged with more complex
hybrid IT environments and are raising budgets to fend off cyberattacks
as well as keep up as production environments continue to diversify
across various clouds. The result is that IT leaders feel they aren't
sufficiently protected. A top priority of organizations this year is
improving reliability and success of backups, followed by ensuring that
Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) and Software as a Service (SaaS)
protection is equitable to the protection they rely on for
datacenter-centric workloads.
Highlights of the Veeam Data Protection Trends Report 2023:
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Modern Data Protection is needed to keep businesses running: Four
out of five organizations believe that they have a gap, or a sense of
dissatisfaction or anxiety, between what their business units expect and
what IT services can deliver. 82% have an ‘Availability Gap' between
how quickly they need systems to be recoverable and how quickly IT can
bring them back. 79% cite a ‘Protection Gap' between how much data they
can lose and how frequently IT protects their data. These gaps are one
reason that 57% of organizations expect to change their primary data
protection in 2023, as well as the justification for increased data
protection budgets.
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Data protection budgets are increasing: Globally, organizations
expect to increase their data protection budget in 2023 by 6.5%, which
is notably higher than overall spending plans in other areas of IT. Of
the 85% of organizations planning on increasing their data protection
budgets, their average planned increase is 8.3% and often in concert
with increased investments in cybersecurity tools.
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Despite the awareness and increase in preparedness, ransomware is winning: Cyberattacks
caused the most impactful outages for organizations in 2020, 2021 and
2022, according to the report. 85% of organizations were attacked at
least once in the past 12 months; up from 76% in last year's report.
Specifically, recovery is a main concern as organizations reported that
only 55% of their encrypted/destroyed data was recoverable from attacks.
According to the survey, the single most important aspect that
organizations are looking for in a Modern Data Protection solution is
the "integration of data protection within a cyber preparedness
strategy."
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Ransomware is the biggest hindrance to Digital Transformation:
Due to its burden on budgets and manpower, ransomware and the current
volatile cyber security landscape are taking priority for IT teams. This
is causing IT resources and budgets originally allocated towards
Digital Transformation initiatives to pivot to cyber prevention. Not
only do cyberattacks drain operational budgets from ransoms to recovery
efforts, but they also reduce organizations' ability to modernize for
their future success; instead, they must pay for prevention and
mitigation of the status quo.
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Container-centric workloads are growing in popularity: Containers,
and more specifically Kubernetes, show all the characteristics of a
mainstream production platform, with the same kinds of data protection
strategy disparities as seen in early adopters of SaaS five years ago or
virtualization 15 years ago. 52% of respondents are currently
running containers, while 40% of organizations are planning to deploy
containers - and yet, most organizations are merely protecting the
underlying storage, instead of holistically protecting the workloads
themselves. This is typical as new production platforms enter
mainstream, followed by recognition that legacy methods are
insufficient, thereby creating an opportunity for third-party backup
tools to ensure comprehensive protection.
"IT leaders are facing a dual challenge. They are building and
supporting increasingly complex hybrid environments, while the volume
and sophistication of cyberattacks is increasing," said Danny Allan, CTO
and Senior Vice President of Product Strategy at Veeam. "This is a
major concern as leaders think through how they mitigate and recover
business operations from any type of disruption. Legacy backup
approaches won't address modern workloads - from IaaS and SaaS to
containers - and result in an unreliable and slow recovery for the
business when it's needed most. This is what's focusing the minds of IT
leaders as they consider their cyber resiliency plan. They need Modern
Data Protection."
Notable insights from the report include:
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Reliability and consistency (of protecting IaaS and SaaS alongside
datacenter servers) are the key drivers for improving data protection in
2023. For organizations that are struggling to protect cloud-hosted
data with legacy backup solutions, it is likely they will supplement
their data center backup solution with IaaS/PaaS and/or SaaS
capabilities.
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Ransomware is both the most common and most impactful cause of outages,
alongside natural disasters (fire, flood, etc.) and user errors
(overwrites, deletion, etc.). Organizations should implement backup and
recovery solutions that support a holistic approach to data protection,
and that can integrate with other cyber detection and remediation
technologies to ensure comprehensive cyber resilience.
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Cloud-based services seem nearly inevitable for organizations of all
sizes. But similar to how there isn't just one type of production cloud,
there isn't just one protection cloud scenario. Organizations should
consider cloud tiers for retention, Backup as a Service (BaaS) and
ultimately, Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS).
Download the complete Veeam Data Protection Trends Report 2023 at https://vee.am/DPR23. For more information, visit www.veeam.com.