How confident are you that your business could recover from a cyberattack, cloud outage, or infrastructure failure in minutes rather than hours or even days?
In this episode of Tech Talks Daily, I explore the changing nature of enterprise resilience with Joseph D'Angelo and Cassie Stanek from InfoScale, now part of Cloud Software Group.
Our conversation looks at why many organizations still rely on backup and replication strategies that were designed for a very different era of IT. In a world of hybrid infrastructure, multi-cloud deployments, and increasingly complex application stacks, those traditional tools often protect the data but often fail to restore the business services that depend on it.
My guests shares how InfoScale approaches resilience from the application layer outward. Instead of focusing on individual components such as storage or infrastructure, the platform looks at the relationships between applications, services, and data so entire systems can be orchestrated and recovered as a coordinated unit. That distinction becomes especially important during a ransomware attack or cloud outage, where restoring a single database rarely brings a digital business back online.
We also discuss how growing regulatory pressure is changing the conversation. Enterprises are no longer expected to simply claim they have disaster recovery processes in place. Increasingly they must demonstrate, test, and prove that recovery capabilities actually work. Cassie explains how controlled "fire drill" rehearsals allow organizations to validate recovery plans without disrupting production systems, creating defensible proof that systems can be restored when it matters most.
We also look ahead to the next phase of resilience, where environments will increasingly diagnose, adapt, and respond to disruptions in real time. Instead of reacting after an outage occurs, operational resilience will rely on predictive analytics, anomaly detection, and automated response capabilities that allow systems to self-correct before users ever notice a problem.
Throughout our discussion, one theme becomes clear. IT resilience is no longer just an infrastructure conversation. It has become a business continuity strategy that directly affects revenue, customer trust, and competitive advantage. As organizations depend more heavily on digital services, the ability to recover quickly from disruption is becoming one of the defining capabilities of modern enterprise technology.
So after listening, I'm curious about your perspective. Do you think most organizations are truly prepared for operational resilience in a multi-cloud world, or are many still relying on backup strategies that were built for a much simpler IT environment?