Try answering this without checking: if a senior engineer leaves today and their Microsoft 365 account is deleted next week, how much of their actual working context can you restore cleanly, and in context?
Mind you, we’re not talking only about data. We mean emails, chats, the messy, in-between information that keeps projects moving.
Most teams think they can recover it. But very few have tested that assumption under pressure.
The Shared Responsibility Model
Microsoft keeps the platform available, but you’re responsible for the data inside it. Pretty straightforward; that is, until something goes wrong.
And when something breaks, like a deleted account or bad sync, Microsoft 365 doesn’t roll your environment back to how it was before. You get limited recovery options, often fragmented across services.
And that’s the problem: you don’t lose everything at once. You lose just enough to slow down decisions and weaken traceability.
Retention isn’t Recovery
Retention policies exist to keep data for compliance. They’re not designed to help you reconstruct a working state.
You might retain emails for years and still struggle to rebuild a conversation thread in context. You might have file versioning enabled and still miss the exact state your team used before an overwrite or sync error.
So yes, the data technically exists. But not in a form that helps you move forward quickly, making it… Well, pretty useless.
Why Data Loss Hits Robotics Teams Particularly Hard
A CAD file without its discussion thread is incomplete. A test result without the surrounding decisions? Hard to trust. And a firmware change without the original rationale can send engineers back to square one.
The point is, in robotics, context is part of the asset. And you feel this most during pressure moments: production issues, client escalations, and audits.
Frameworks like IEC 62443 and NIS2 don’t explicitly tell you how to back up Microsoft 365. But they do expect traceability, integrity, and the ability to reconstruct events. Without reliable recovery, that expectation is very difficult to meet.
Outlook and OneDrive: Where Most Risk Lives
Most critical gaps show up in two places: email and file storage.
Outlook holds approvals, vendor coordination, and decisions that never make it into formal systems. Lose access or continuity there, and your audit trail weakens instantly.
OneDrive and SharePoint carry design files, scripts, and working documentation. Versioning helps, but it doesn’t protect against everything, especially when bad or corrupted data syncs across devices or gets overwritten at scale.
If you want a clearer view of how modern tools handle this (especially with ransomware-aware recovery), it’s worth looking at how cloud backup for Office files is evolving, with platforms like Acronis focusing on isolated storage and clean, reliable restores.
Comparing Backup Options
Native Microsoft tools give you baseline protection. They help in simple scenarios.
But once you need granular recovery (e.g., specific emails, full mailboxes, individual files, or entire project spaces), you usually need to use third-party tools. Here, speed, flexibility, and clarity are the differentiators.
Acronis, which we’ve mentioned, combines backup with ransomware protection and immutable storage. It’s great for robotics firms where restoring compromised files or project data could halt production or violate compliance.
Some platforms, like Veeam, lean into flexibility, meaning you can choose where your data lives and how you manage storage. It’s a good option for teams that want tighter control.
Others, like AvePoint, focus on SaaS simplicity and scale, with frequent automated backups and strong search and bulk-restore capabilities (useful when you’re cleaning up after user error or a wider incident).
Restore Testing
Here’s the uncomfortable part: most teams haven’t actually tested their restores. Why? They assume recovery will work because backups exist somewhere.
Unfortunately, restore speed, completeness, and usability only become clear when you run the process end-to-end. So test it.
Restore a mailbox, rebuild a OneDrive folder, and simulate a user deletion. Also, measure how long it takes and what’s missing.
So Do You Need Microsoft 365 Backups?
Yes. To put it succinctly.
You need a dedicated backup strategy if your firm depends on Microsoft 365 for operational data (which it does).
Not because Microsoft is unreliable, but because your risk profile is different. You’re not just protecting files; you need to back up decisions, context, and the ability to keep moving when something goes wrong. Because it often does.
