• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
TechTidBit – Tips and advice for small business computing – Tech Experts™ – Monroe Michigan

TechTidBit - Tips and advice for small business computing - Tech Experts™ - Monroe Michigan

Brought to you by Tech Experts™

data retention

You Absolutely Need To Back Up Your Cloud Services Like Office 365

January 20, 2026

Thomas Fox is president of Tech Experts, southeast Michigan’s leading small business computer support company.
Most businesses today rely heavily on Microsoft 365 for email, documents, calendars, and collaboration. It’s the backbone of day-to-day operations.

Because Microsoft has massive data centers and strong uptime, many people assume their data is automatically “fully backed up.” That’s a dangerous assumption.

Microsoft 365 runs on a shared responsibility model. Microsoft does a great job keeping the platform running, but protecting your data is still your responsibility. In other words, they keep the lights on – but what happens to your files, emails, and Teams data is ultimately on you.

Yes, Microsoft includes some built-in safety nets. Things like file versioning in OneDrive and SharePoint, recycle bins that typically keep deleted items for up to three months, and basic retention policies can help recover from simple mistakes. Accidentally delete a file or overwrite a document? You may be able to get it back – if you catch it in time.

That “if” is the problem. Once those retention windows expire, your data is gone. There’s no rewind button. And these tools aren’t designed for full, point-in-time restores or long-term archiving across your entire environment.

Human error alone makes this risky. Someone deletes the wrong folder. An email with an important attachment is purged. A departing employee’s mailbox is removed before something critical is discovered.

These things happen every day, often without anyone realizing it until it’s too late.

Security threats raise the stakes even higher. Ransomware and account takeovers increasingly target Microsoft 365 environments through phishing and stolen credentials.

Even with good security controls in place, breaches still happen. When attackers encrypt or delete cloud data, Microsoft’s native tools don’t always provide a clean, fast way to roll everything back.

Then there are outages. While rare, Microsoft 365 service disruptions do occur. When access is interrupted, organizations without independent backups may find themselves completely stuck, unable to retrieve email, files, or records when they need them most.

Compliance requirements add another layer. Industries governed by HIPAA, GDPR, or financial regulations often need longer retention, audit trails, and reliable recovery options. Microsoft’s built-in tools help, but they’re usually not enough on their own.

That’s where third-party Microsoft 365 backups come in. Dedicated backup solutions capture your data regularly, store it independently, and let you restore exactly what you need when you need it. They’re affordable, easy to automate, and dramatically reduce risk.

Bottom line: Microsoft 365 is an excellent productivity platform, but it is not a complete backup solution. If your data matters to your business, relying on built-in tools alone is a gamble you don’t need to take.

What Is Data Retention? Why Do I Need It?

May 23, 2018

If you are in the medical or legal industry, regulations require you to retain data and records for a certain period of time. The data retention process was a little more clear-cut back when it was only files and sheets of papers in brown boxes that you stored in the attic or the basement.

However, in today’s time, almost everything is in digital form, whether it’s stored locally on a file server, external hard drives, or in the cloud.

This data needs to be secure and easily accessible in the event you need to retrieve any of it. Depending on how much data you have, there are many options.

The one thing you do not want to do is buy a cheap hard drive, move your data over to it, and think you’re safe.

If you only have one copy of that data and you move it to a new location, that is your only copy. You want to have your data saved in more than one location or a mirror copy of it saved.

A business might want to consider a local or cloud server with a RAID setup so that there is a copy of your copy. It creates a copy of your data so that, in the event of a hardware failure or data corruption, the data can be restored from the second copy.

The first copy would be returned to the last version, like nothing happened to it.

If you are a larger business and/or deal with medical or financial information, it would be very wise to utilize data encryption for the stored data.

However, every business should create a data retention policy and follow it. Categorize documents and images, then specify how long the data is to be retained.

Make sure all employees and IT professionals with access to company and client data know and adhere to this policy.

The main thing to keep in mind is the type and quality of hardware that is used. It’s great to have a data retention policy in place and follow it exactly, but if your data gets corrupted, stolen, or a hard drive fails, the policy does you no good.

The key to a rock-solid data retention policy starts with having a robust backup solution in place as well.

The backup solution can either be a cloud-based system or an on-site enterprise storage device or server with a proper RAID setup.

Here at Tech Experts, we can assist you with establishing a file server with the correct RAID configuration to ensure that the retained data is safe and secure, with encryption and redundancy built in. Cloud based image backups are also a great way to ensure the safety of your data.

We can also start you on a managed service plan for monitoring and maintenance of that server and your other workstations, laptops, printer, and VoIP phone systems.

Wherever you decide to store your data, make sure that enterprise hardware and security measures are used to ensure that your data will remain intact.

Primary Sidebar

Browse past issues

  • 2026 Issues
  • 2025 Issues
  • 2024 Issues
  • 2023 issues
  • 2022 Issues
  • 2021 Issues
  • 2020 Issues
  • 2019 Issues
  • 2018 Issues
  • 2017 Issues
  • 2016 Issues
  • 2015 Issues
  • 2014 Issues
  • 2013 Issues
  • 2012 Issues
  • 2011 Issues
  • 2010 Issues
  • 2009 Issues
  • 2008 Issues
  • 2007 Issues
  • 2006 Issues

More to See

It’s Time To Prepare For The Era Of Agentic AI

January 20, 2026

Upgrading Your Technology Could Reduce The Impact Of Sick Leave

January 20, 2026

Why Hackers Love Small Businesses… And It Isn’t The Reason You Think

January 20, 2026

Why You Should Treat Scam Alerts Like A Fire Drill

December 19, 2025

Tags

AI Antivirus backups Cloud Computing Cloud Storage COVID-19 cyberattacks cybersecurity Data Management Disaster Planning Disaster Recovery E-Mail Facebook Firewalls Hard Drives Internet Laptops Maintenance Malware Managed Services Marketing Microsoft Network online security Passwords password security Phishing planning Productivity Ransomware remote work Security Servers smart phones Social Media Tech Tips Upgrading Viruses vulnerabilities Websites Windows Windows 7 Windows 10 Windows Updates work from home

Copyright © 2026 Tech Experts™ · Tech Experts™ is a registered trademark of Tech Support Inc.