Backups that actually restore when it matters
Automated backup for your servers, PCs, and Microsoft 365 — ransomware-resilient copies and restores tested on a schedule, so recovery is a plan, not a hope.
No cost, no obligation — call or text (254) 226-9122
The only backup that counts is the one you have already restored
Every business has a backup story that ends the same way: the icon was green for months, and the day a server died or a laptop walked off, the restore failed — corrupt files, missing folders, a job that had been silently failing since spring. Backup software is very good at looking like it works. The only proof is a restore, and most businesses have never run one.
Ransomware has raised the stakes. Attackers now hunt for backups first — deleting or encrypting them before they lock a single file — because a business that can restore does not pay. A copy sitting on your network, reachable with your credentials, is not a safety net; it is the first target. Real resilience means immutable, off-site copies that even your own compromised network cannot touch.
Your insurer has noticed too. Cyber-insurance carriers now commonly require tested backups — alongside MFA and endpoint detection — as a condition of coverage, and 'we think it works' does not survive a claims investigation. IronPoint backs up your servers, PCs, and Microsoft 365, tests restores on a schedule, and hands you a plain-English report each time — the same document that answers your carrier's questions.
What you get
Automated cloud & local backup
Servers and PCs backed up on schedule without anyone remembering to plug in a drive — a local copy for fast restores, a cloud copy for disasters.
Microsoft 365 backup
Mail, OneDrive, SharePoint, and Teams backed up independently of Microsoft, so a deletion or ransomware event does not sync away your only copy.
Ransomware-resilient copies
Immutable, off-site copies with separate credentials — backups that attackers cannot encrypt or delete even after they get inside your network.
Rapid restore & continuity planning
A written plan for what comes back first, on what hardware, in what order — agreed before anything fails, so recovery is execution, not improvisation.
Scheduled restore testing
We restore real files and systems on a schedule and prove they work — because a backup that has never been restored is just a theory.
Daily verification & plain reports
Every backup job checked daily, so a silent failure gets caught right away — not discovered on the day you need the restore. Reports come in plain English.
How it works
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Assess
A free, no-obligation look at where you stand — what works, what is at risk, and what it should cost.
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Onboard
We baseline your systems, close the obvious gaps, and document everything so nothing lives in one person’s head.
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Monitor & deliver
Proactive monitoring, patching, and 24/7 threat detection run in the background while you run the business.
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Support & improve
Fast help when you need it, plus quarterly reviews so your technology keeps up with your growth.
Why IronPoint
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Local, and actually here
Based in Killeen with on-site service across the Killeen–Temple corridor. When you call, you reach the person who does the work — not a national call queue.
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Security-first by design
Every managed plan starts with 24/7 threat detection and response backed by the Huntress security operations center, not bolted on as an upsell.
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One partner for all of it
IT, cybersecurity, AI automation, repair, and your website — one accountable vendor instead of four contractors pointing at each other.
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Plain English, straight answers
Certified (CompTIA A+, Network+, Security+) and allergic to jargon. You get real options and real prices before any work starts.
Powered by trusted technology
Enterprise-grade tools sized for small business — the same stack we run on our own systems.
- Huntress
- Microsoft 365
- Pax8
- NinjaOne
- Keeper Security
- Cloudflare
Frequently asked questions
We back up to an external drive. Is that enough?
An external drive is better than nothing, but it fails every test that matters. Drives die silently, and you usually find out during the restore. A drive that stays plugged in gets encrypted right alongside your files when ransomware hits. And a fire, flood, or theft takes the drive with the computer. A real plan keeps a local copy for fast restores plus an off-site, immutable copy that survives whatever happens to the office.
How fast can we be back up and running after a disaster?
Honest answer: it depends on what failed. A deleted file comes back in minutes. A dead server or a ransomware event depends on how much data you have, what hardware is available, and your internet speed. That is exactly why the continuity plan is written before anything breaks — it sets a realistic recovery expectation for each scenario, in writing. Anyone quoting a universal recovery time without seeing your systems is guessing.
We use OneDrive and SharePoint. Is that not already a backup?
No — sync is not backup. When a file is deleted, corrupted, or encrypted by ransomware on one machine, OneDrive faithfully syncs that damage everywhere. Microsoft keeps deleted items only for limited retention windows, and under Microsoft's own shared-responsibility model, protecting your data is your job, not theirs. A separate Microsoft 365 backup keeps independent copies of mail, OneDrive, SharePoint, and Teams — restorable long after the built-in windows close.
What does ransomware-resilient actually mean?
Modern ransomware crews look for your backups first and destroy them before they encrypt anything — a working restore means you have no reason to pay their ransom. Ransomware-resilient means the copies are out of their reach: stored off-site, written to immutable storage that cannot be altered or deleted for a set period, and protected by credentials separate from your network. If an attacker owns your office network, they still cannot own your recovery.
How often do you actually test restores?
On a schedule we agree to at onboarding — and testing means restoring real files and systems and verifying they work, not glancing at a dashboard checkmark. After each test you get a plain-English report: what was restored, how long it took, and anything that needs fixing. That report is also exactly what cyber-insurance carriers want to see when the renewal application asks whether your backups are tested.
Find out whether your backups would actually restore
Start with a free, no-obligation assessment — or just call. You'll talk to the person who does the work.