CloudStep

5 Ways to Avoid Data Disasters

Whether you are a full-time freelancer or entrepreneur on the go, your hard work — all the files and data you complete for your client / own business — is at risk. It could be one spilled coffee on your laptop or one client who saves over the only copy of a file you sent them. Anything could destroy your hours of hard work in an heartbeat.
Here are five tips on how to ensure your work is protected and how to make sure you’re never opening yourself up to a tech disaster.

1. When you’re on the road, your data is vulnerable.

Anytime you take your work on the go, you’re opening yourself up to a number of security risks. For example, using a Wi-Fi network that’s not secure can mean risking the confidential data your client has entrusted to you. If someone else is able to gain access to this sensitive information, then you’re left responsible for the loss!

2. Your laptop is your lifeline, not your lockbox.

If you’re working anywhere outside your home — local coffee shop, airport lounge — then your laptop or tablet, etc. can easily be swiped in seconds, meaning that any confidential information on there is now in the hands of the thief. Also, any projects or work saved only on your laptop could be lost forever. That’s irreplaceable hours of work — i.e., money! — that you’re potentially at risk to lose.

3. Sharing is not always caring.

If you work with multiple clients, then you’ll undoubtedly need to share your work. But what happens if a collaborator accidentally deletes a file from your cloud storage repository? The work could be gone for good.

4. Be an entrepreneur with enterprise-level security.

While large enterprises often provide employees with secure file-sharing systems, remote workers / freelancers may not have access to these — meaning you could accidentally forward a link to a private or client-sensitive file to someone who shouldn’t have access it, violating your client’s privacy.

5. Storage does not equal safety.

This is a conversation in need of happening, as a recent surveyhighlights as a point of confusion for most. If you’re using cloud storage as a substitute for backup, you can easily lose data through accidental deletion, overwriting or by simply forgetting to manually upload files before disaster — or a security incident — arises.

Available at: https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/253944

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