If you have a Windows server and you're not backing it up, you are tempting fate. It's only a matter of time before something tragic will happen: a hardware failure, a hacker, or a corrupted Windows update. Something will bring that server down and do everything it can to take your data with it.
Luckily, several reliable backup solutions are available for the Windows Server environment. They aren't perfect. But the five solutions discussed here have their strengths and can be depended upon to keep your data safe. Now, before I reveal the big five, I want to make sure you understand how critical it is to be backing up that data to an external drive and to rotate that drive offsite. If you're backing up drives and leaving everything onsite, should a fire (or some other catastrophe) occur, that data will be lost.
Windows Free backup software is exactly what you think it is: completely free software that can be used to manually or automatically back up the important data on your computer hard drive to somewhere safe like a disc, flash drive, network drive, etc. BackupAssist produces windows server backup software build for SMB'sand SME's. Our backup software offers incremental backup, onsite backup, offsite backup, and rapid recovories for disaster recovery and business continuity. A couple of other software applications you can consider are for cloud backup software. Although you install the application on your PC or other device, your files are backed up in the cloud.
Note: This list is also available as a photo gallery.
1: Acronis Backup and Restore (with Universal Restore)
Windows Server Backup Software
Acronis Backup and Restore (Figure A) is the backup tool I use the most. It's costly but well worth it. The newer version of Acronis does a great job of ensuring that there is room on your external drive for your latest backup. You can overwrite the old backup or go by the traditional cleanup rules established in Acronis Echo. But if you go the Acronis route, you should also purchase the Universal Restore feature. With this tool, you can take a full image of a backup and restore it to any hardware — so long as it meets the requirements of your platform. That way, you don't need an exact duplicate of your server hardware sitting around waiting to have an image restored onto it. Acronis also has add-ons for Exchange and SQL Servers.Figure A
Acronis Backup and Restore
2: Symantec Backup Exec

Figure B
Symantec Backup Exec
3: Carbonite
Carbonite (Figure C
Figure D
Windows NT Backup
Windows Server Backup Software Free
5: ShadowProtect 4 (Server)
ShadowProtect 4 (
Figure E
ShadowProtect 4
Which backup?
Every company needs a backup plan. How far you go with your backup depends upon the size of the company, your needs, and your budget. But any of the above solutions will serve as a great place to start — or stop — for your Windows Server backup needs. Do you have a different backup solution to add to the list? Share your recommendations with fellow TechRepublic members.