iTnews
  • Home
  • News
  • Technology
  • Security

Data recovery booms via channel

By Fleur Doidge
Oct 5 2005 5:42PM
Follow google news

Information retrieval specialist CBL Data Recovery has trebled its reseller numbers this year and plans to add more to reinforce a wave of demand for disaster recovery services.

Information retrieval specialist CBL Data Recovery has trebled its reseller numbers this year and plans to add more to reinforce a wave of demand for disaster recovery services.

Guy Riddle, Sydney manager of the US-based company, said the Australian division's partner numbers had gone from 15 to about 43 over the past year. That included resellers in places such as Darwin, Airlie Beach and Perth.

"They're typically organisations that are providing some sort of network infrastructure services to companies, what I would call a VAR," he said.

Managed service providers were using CBL Data Recovery, which divided its resellers into referral-based and full service partnerships, he said.

The company was also negotiating potential partnership deals with OEMs and system builders such as Optima, Volante/Ipex, Seagate, Maxtor, IBM and Dell,Riddle said.

"One of the things I am trying to do, one of my longer-term missions, is go to the source -- which is basically OEMs and system builders," he said.

"If you have any problems with a computer that you buy, they will be quite happy to give you something within the warranty, a replacement part or component, but completely absolve themselves of responsibility for the data."

Riddle said CBL Data Recovery wanted to partner major vendors and system builders to provide data recovery services, boosting the one-stop shop angle for vendors and customers.

"Margin on hardware is pretty dead. Maybe consider this as another service offering," he said.

CBL Data Recovery had a clean room in Brisbane and office in Sydney that were successfully handling the current workload. However, if demand continued to increase as expected, a clean room in Sydney might be on the cards within a year, Riddle said.

"We would ideally like to see another 50 percent growth over the next 12 months. If we can get 100 percent growth, that would be fantastic," he said.

The services appealed to small, home office operations to mid-size companies and huge enterprises. All were becoming increasingly reliant on information stored using IT, and needed ways to retrieve it should things go wrong, Riddle pointed out.


Add iTnews as your trusted source

Add iTnews As Your Trusted Source Add iTnews As Your Trusted Source
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Tags:
archivingbackupdatahardwarerecoverysecurity

Related Articles

  • Apple bumps up security in fresh operating system releases Apple bumps up security in fresh operating system releases
  • Meta accuses NSO Group of violating court order by WhatsApp spear phishing Meta accuses NSO Group of violating court order by WhatsApp spear phishing
  • Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM
  • Anthropic opens Claude Mythos Preview AI program to Australia Anthropic opens Claude Mythos Preview AI program to Australia
Join our WhatsApp Channel

Partner Content

Scalable AI solutions: secure delivery
Scalable AI solutions: secure delivery
Onel Consulting Strengthens Its White-Glove Services With Strategic COO Appointment
Promoted Content Onel Consulting Strengthens Its White-Glove Services With Strategic COO Appointment
CommBank creates opportunities for technologists to upskill  with frontier AI companies
Partner Content CommBank creates opportunities for technologists to upskill with frontier AI companies
The hidden economics of AI: Why token usage matters more than you think
Partner Content The hidden economics of AI: Why token usage matters more than you think

Sponsored Whitepapers

Agile in the AI Era: why projects still fail
Agile in the AI Era: why projects still fail
When Technology Becomes the Blocker: Unlocking Real Outcomes from AI and Cloud
When Technology Becomes the Blocker: Unlocking Real Outcomes from AI and Cloud
High-volume data sources for AI-driven security analytics
High-volume data sources for AI-driven security analytics
How healthcare organisations can get more value from cloud
How healthcare organisations can get more value from cloud
1 in 3 companies lose SaaS data. Here’s how to prevent it
1 in 3 companies lose SaaS data. Here’s how to prevent it

Events

  • iTnews State of Security Breakfast iTnews State of Security Breakfast
  • iTnews State of Data & AI Breakfast iTnews State of Data & AI Breakfast
  • The 2026 iAwards The 2026 iAwards
  • Integrate 2026 Integrate 2026
  • Security Exhibition & Conference Security Exhibition & Conference
Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Share on Whatsapp Email A Friend

Most Read Articles

Anthropic opens Claude Mythos Preview AI program to Australia

Anthropic opens Claude Mythos Preview AI program to Australia

Defence says Palantir is "sandboxed" in its environment

Defence says Palantir is "sandboxed" in its environment

Services Australia describes fraud, debt-related machine learning use cases

Services Australia describes fraud, debt-related machine learning use cases

Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM

Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM

techpartner.news logo
Sydney-based AI-cloud waste startup raises $3m
Sydney-based AI-cloud waste startup raises $3m
Brennan uses NiCE to modernise its contact centre
Brennan uses NiCE to modernise its contact centre
Impact Awards: Tecala slashes customer response times for fintech IQumulate
Impact Awards: Tecala slashes customer response times for fintech IQumulate
Interactive introduces private cloud platform
Interactive introduces private cloud platform
Digital61 expands cybersecurity portfolio
Digital61 expands cybersecurity portfolio
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any form without prior authorisation.
Your use of this website constitutes acceptance of nextmedia's Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.