The company said Flexential DRaaS is scalable and tailored to each business's individual needs with support for all types of environments, including on-premises, cloud, colocation and hybrid, and allows customisation to technical and business requirements.
It is also designed to protect organisations' most critical workloads that require RPOs of seconds and RTOs of minutes.
"In today's highly connected world, business uptime and data availability are critical for business survival,” said Mike Fuhrman, chief operating officer, Cloud and Managed Services, Flexential.
“Even seconds of downtime or data loss can be extremely destructive, causing revenue loss, brand damage and legal impacts.
"Flexential, which has nearly a decade of experience in DRaaS, is now offering a new, scalable, cloud-based disaster recovery solution that will give businesses the highly available environment, redundancy and continuous data protection they need to keep their data safe."
The solution is powered by Zerto Continuous Data Protection (CDP), which provides journal-based recovery, allowing granular recovery of data before a cyberattack.
There has been a 148% rise this year in ransomware attacks relating specifically to COVID-19 scams.
According to Forrester Research, COVID-19 shined a bright light on every company unprepared to recover from a data centre outage and refocused enterprise IT teams on improving resiliency.
"As businesses now work to ensure they are prepared when the next disaster strikes, Flexential is making data protection simple by designing, hosting and managing it for any organisation,” said the company.
“Flexential disaster recovery experts can guide organisations through the whole disaster recovery process from assessing the environment to designing, implementing and testing the entire disaster recovery infrastructure.
“The solution also saves organisations from overspending on data protection because it is a cloud-based, fully managed service that eliminates upfront investments in hardware, licensing management, and internal resource allocations.”