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Email Backups | ITIAN Small Business
Business Email Protection

Email Backups

Protect important conversations, attachments and business records with a documented backup and recovery plan.

Create a Backup Plan

Why Email Needs Protection

Email often contains approvals, customer history, invoices, contracts and evidence of important business decisions.

Accidental Deletion

A user can delete a message, folder or entire mailbox and discover the mistake after the provider’s recovery period has passed.

Account Problems

Compromise, suspension, lost credentials or an incorrect administrator action can interrupt access to business email.

Staff Changes

Important correspondence can disappear when an employee leaves and their account is deleted without a proper handover.

Malware and Fraud

Attackers may delete, alter or misuse messages and forwarding rules after gaining access to an account.

Provider or Migration Errors

Configuration mistakes and incomplete migrations can leave messages, contacts or settings unavailable.

Record Requirements

The business may need to retain particular financial, contractual, employment or customer records for defined periods.

Backup Is Not the Same as Sync

Understanding the difference prevents false confidence.

Synchronisation

Sync keeps the same mailbox available across devices. If a message is deleted or changed, that action may synchronise everywhere. Sync improves access but is not automatically an independent backup.

Backup

A backup keeps a separate recoverable copy, preferably with historical versions, retention controls and protection from ordinary user deletion or account compromise.

Also different: Retention and eDiscovery tools can preserve information for legal or compliance purposes, but they should be assessed carefully before being treated as the business’s complete backup and operational recovery solution.

Build an Email Backup Plan

A useful plan explains what is protected, how often it is copied and how it will be restored.

Identify critical mailboxes. Include owners, customer service, finance, sales, shared mailboxes and any address containing important records.
Define what must be retained. Consider messages, attachments, contacts, calendars, labels, folders, rules and shared-mailbox content.
Choose a suitable method. Use provider exports for occasional archives or a reputable automated backup service for ongoing protection and faster recovery.
Set the schedule and retention. Match backup frequency and history to how much data the business can afford to lose and its record obligations.
Protect the backup. Restrict administrator access, use multi-factor authentication, encrypt data and keep backup credentials separate from normal email accounts.
Test recovery. Regularly restore sample messages and attachments so the business knows the process works before an emergency.

Gmail and Google Workspace

Google provides export and administrative tools, but the right approach depends on account type and business needs.

Google Takeout

Individual users can export Gmail data to create an archive. Exports may include messages, attachments, labels and account settings.

Workspace Data Export

Eligible Google Workspace administrators can use organisational export tools for supported business data.

Google Vault

Some Workspace editions provide retention, holds, search and export capabilities for compliance and eDiscovery.

Important: A manual export is a point-in-time archive, not an automatic continuous backup. Document when exports are created, where they are stored and how they can be restored or searched.

Microsoft 365 and Outlook

Microsoft 365 includes resilience, retention and recovery features, but businesses should still define their own backup and recovery requirements.

Mailbox Recovery

Understand the available deleted-item and mailbox recovery periods for the organisation’s Microsoft 365 plan.

Retention Policies

Administrators can configure retention according to business, legal and regulatory requirements where supported.

Independent Backup

Assess a Microsoft 365 backup product when the business needs automated copies, longer history or simple item-level restoration.

Backup Security Checklist

Backups contain valuable business information and must be protected as carefully as the live mailbox.

Every critical mailbox is included.
Backup frequency is documented.
Retention periods are appropriate.
Backup data is encrypted.
Administrator access uses MFA.
Backup credentials are kept separate.
Former staff access is removed promptly.
Recovery tests are recorded.
Privacy and record rules are considered.
The plan has a responsible owner.

Test a Recovery

A backup is only useful if the business can recover the correct information when it is needed.

Select a safe test item. Choose a non-sensitive message with a known attachment and record its sender, date and subject.
Locate it in the backup. Confirm that search, labels, folders or date filters identify the correct message.
Restore or export it. Recover the message into a safe test location without overwriting current data.
Open and verify it. Check the message body, headers and attachment for completeness.
Record the result. Note the date, time taken, person responsible, issues found and corrective actions.
Do not wait for an emergency: Test after initial setup, after major account changes and at a regular interval chosen by the business.

Common Questions

Is cloud email automatically backed up?

Cloud providers protect their infrastructure and offer recovery features, but those features may not meet every business’s requirements for accidental deletion, long-term retention, account compromise or independent recovery.

Is forwarding email to another account a backup?

No. Forwarding may omit older messages, folders, labels, sent mail, contacts, calendars and settings. It can also introduce privacy and security problems.

Can I save email only on one computer?

A local archive can be one component, but one device can fail, be stolen or become infected. Maintain another protected copy and document how the archive is opened.

How often should email be backed up?

Base the schedule on how much recent email the business could afford to lose. A high-volume or critical mailbox generally needs more frequent protection than an occasional-use address.

How long should backups be kept?

Retention depends on business needs, privacy obligations, contractual requirements and applicable laws. Obtain professional advice when legal or regulatory retention is involved.

Official Google guidance: Review exporting Gmail data and downloading Google data.