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Conversational Microsoft Teams Backup

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that leads to data loss. Remember, your backup application should be able to help you put things back to the way that they were, as quickly as possible. Excess complexity can cause the recovery process to be slow and error prone. Finally, make sure that the product that you choose is storage agnostic and designed to work in hybrid environments. Ideally, the software should make almost no distinction between your servers running on premises, and the resources that you are protecting in the Microsoft 365 cloud, nor should it care what type of storage the data is physically residing on. You should be able to use the same interface and techniques to back up both environments, and you should be able to restore data from one environment to the other environment if necessary. The Big Takeaways Microsoft Teams is a little bit different from most applications, because its data is located in a bunch of different places. While it's easy to assume that Teams data is stored in a SQL database somewhere, the data is actually scattered across a variety of Microsoft 365 applications. Therefore, if you want to back up Teams, you have to back up the different components in which it is stored (i.e. Exchange, SharePoint, and OneDrive) and the backup intelligence and metadata to connect the dots Backing up Microsoft 365 is important. Microsoft does not back it up for you. It's up to you to protect your Teams data and the data associated with other Microsoft 365 applications. Of course, to do that you are going to need a reliable Microsoft 365 backup application, and most importantly, one that includes purpose-built support for Teams.

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