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Acer America
Acer America Corp. is a computer manufacturer of business and consumer PCs, notebooks, ultrabooks, projectors, servers, and storage products.

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333 West San Carlos Street
San Jose, California 95110
United States

WWW: acer.com

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March 2, 2022 |

N-able Aims to be Synonymous with BDR

Chris Groot (pictured) is one of many executives working hard to get more MSPs thinking “backup” along with RMM, PSA, and security when they hear “N-able”.

Hear the name “N-able” and you probably think first about the company’s two RMM solutions, its PSA system, or perhaps the security capabilities it’s been steadily adding in recent years through both in-house development and alliance agreements with companies like SentinelOne and DNSFilter. What probably doesn’t come to mind right away is BDR.

“Backup and data protection capabilities are something that I think market awareness has not been as high on,” concedes Chris Groot, who became N-able’s general manager of backup last December. “Raising awareness is a priority.”

The key word in that statement is “raising,” because some MSPs are clearly aware that N-able does BDR already. The company called out N-able Backup, its cloud-to-cloud backup solution for Microsoft 365, as a key contributor to the 12% year-over-year fourth quarter revenue growth it reported last week. Groot, however, plans to spend a lot of time this year ensuring that more channel pros know N-able is no newcomer to data protection.

“We’ve been working at this for quite some time,” he says. “We’ve been maturing our product to be ready for the big leagues.”

The qualities that best exemplify that maturity, he continues, include the system’s deliberate rejection of conventional image-based backup techniques, which most MSPs see as the speediest way to get customers up and running again after a system outage. According to Groot, however, that view reflects a widespread misconception of what matters in a BDR platform.

“You don’t really want image-based backup. You want image-based recovery,” he says. 

Following that logic, N-able Backup stores only the portions of an image “inside of the operating system,” and tacks on the rest of the image during the restore process. The result, Groot continues, is smaller backup files and shorter backup times.

“We move on average about 50 times less data with each incremental backup compared to an image-based solution,” he says, noting that users can save more restore points as a result without driving up storage costs.

“A lot of traditional standards have been to do a daily backup, but if you have an incident at 3:45 in the afternoon, that means you have to lose a whole day of transactions,” he says. “Frequency really matters.”

N-able Backup’s defining characteristic, however, is its 100% direct-to-cloud architecture, which unlike most BDR systems employs no local hardware. That cloud-first strategy is very much in keeping with the tech world’s rapid switch to cloud-first everything, Groot observes. 

“It used to be everyone had their Exchange server and their file server on the local network,” he says. Now pretty much everyone hosts their email entirely in the cloud. “We’re doing the same thing for backup and disaster recovery,” Groot explains.

Cloud-first BDR is what more and more MSPs want too, he adds, echoing recent comments from backup and availability specialist Axcient, because it reduces their exposure to both logjammed supply chains and fat hardware bills. 

“For a lot of businesses, that’s a very expensive proposition in their overall IT equation,” Groot says. “We really lower the cost model.”

That applies to the rising cost of IT talent as well as hardware. “Solutions that require a lot of expertise and a lot of time to implement and to maintain are increasingly less desirable, because it’s just hard to support them with the time that’s involved and the people involved,” Groot says. “The cloud-first strategy greatly simplifies the problem set, because you’re no longer constrained by that local storage.”

You also don’t need to worry about the contents of those local storage systems getting encrypted. “Any good backup needs to be off the network,” Groot says. “Our fundamental architecture of going direct from production to an offsite, off-network backup is inherently a safer design in the case of a ransomware scenario.”

All of those “tailwinds,” as Groot calls them, help explain why global sales of online disaster protection-as-a-service solutions will grow at double-digit rates to $18.4 billion by 2025, according to IDC.

Without divulging details, Groot hints at future enhancements to N-able Backup, such as the ability to recover into hyperscale clouds like Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure and support for SaaS applications beyond Microsoft 365. N-able has more time for developing features like that, he notes, now that its spinoff from parent company SolarWinds is officially behind it.

“Through the last two years, we’ve had a lot of organizational change,” Groot says. “The ability to securely and scalably roll out new features is now back into our purview.”


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