Recently, I have written in this space about how the IRS
offers some relief to those affected by natural disasters in the form of
relaxed deadlines. Of course, this is a small concession to those who lost
property or businesses that lost information. This week then, I want to counsel
on that final part, and how it doesn’t have to happen anymore.
I understand that many people are wary about keeping
information in any type of cloud service. And sure, we hear enough stories
about information breaches that caution is warranted. If you personally feel
this way, however, I urge you to do a little research about the security
offered by legitimate services. Chances are that unless you have invested
significant time and money into your on-site security, it is not any better
than cloud services. Obviously one cannot deny that you are opening yourself to
a possible breach when you store information somewhere else, but you are
already open to that possibility. The only way to prevent it is if you are
keeping everything on a computer not connected to the internet. And in that
case, how are you reading this anyway?
Even in that situation, however, you are not completely
safe. In the case of actual physical theft, you then would be left with zero
access to everything you lost. Or envision one of those natural-disaster
situations that results in a flood that makes your electronics unusable. At
that point, you may wish you embraced cloud services a little more.
Think of storing your information digitally not as opening
yourself to a new point of attack, but ensuring against the points of attack
you already have. For as I intimated before, it is impossible to say that you
are completely safe if you work on devices that are open to the internet. After
all, cyberattacks do not only occur on a grand scale.
Beyond the security aspects of embracing the cloud, it can
also greatly enhance your business’s workflow. Even if you’re a solo
entrepreneur, have you ever been away from the office and wished that you had
access to some work information? Placing that information into the cloud can
allow you that any-time, any-place access.
This can be even more beneficial if you work with a team.
Then, when you are networked, you allow everyone who needs access to that
information contact with it. If they make changes to that information, those
alterations will be saved so that everyone gets the latest version. This
removes the need to reconstruct or combine changes in the future or send
updated files between workers (which would just be another place for a
potential security breach anyway).
There are so many new tools to help with these workflows
that it is impossible to give an overarching recommendation to everyone;
different businesses will have different needs. Chances are, though, that there
are many things out there that can help your business while remaining secure. I
recommend everyone take the time to consider them.
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