Director of Field Strategy at a tech services company with 11-50 employees
Real User
2020-12-08T19:36:37Z
Dec 8, 2020
I believe that (if I'm not mistaken), there are a couple of different pricing models. Early on, we were using the storage based model. It's a fee for however much backup storage you had and if you use a limited number of servers, as long as you stayed within that storage retention. They range from $199, $299, $399, all the way up to whatever it is that you need it to be, or a list price for individual server licenses — I think it was roughly $70 or $75 per server with two terabytes of storage and roughly $10 or $15 for the workstations. We've bought so much of it that our pricing is much better.
Disaster Recovery as a Service offers cloud-based solutions for efficient data recovery in the event of disruptions, ensuring business continuity and minimizing downtime.This flexible service integrates with existing IT infrastructure, enabling automatic data protection and fast recovery processes. Organizations can scale resources as needed, manage data on demand, and enhance security protocols, making it suitable for businesses of all sizes. Users benefit from cost-efficiency as it...
I believe that (if I'm not mistaken), there are a couple of different pricing models. Early on, we were using the storage based model. It's a fee for however much backup storage you had and if you use a limited number of servers, as long as you stayed within that storage retention. They range from $199, $299, $399, all the way up to whatever it is that you need it to be, or a list price for individual server licenses — I think it was roughly $70 or $75 per server with two terabytes of storage and roughly $10 or $15 for the workstations. We've bought so much of it that our pricing is much better.