Replication as a Service

Continuity when interruption is not acceptable

Some systems cannot wait to be restored. Replication as a Service maintains near real time copies of workloads in a secondary location, allowing operations to continue with minimal disruption when incidents occur.

Fonicom delivers replication as a managed service designed for environments where downtime and data loss have immediate business impact.

Technology exists. Coordination does not.

Replication is often deployed without clear recovery intent. Systems replicate, but failover processes are unclear, untested or manual. This leads to:

Uncertain recovery timelines.

Risk during failover.

Inconsistent data states.

Decision pressure during incidents.

Replication fails when continuity is assumed rather than engineered.

Predictable continuity

When replication is structured properly, organisations gain:

Clearly defined recovery objectives.

Near real time data availability.

Pontrolled and tested failover processes.

Confidence that critical services can resume quickly.

Continuity becomes operationally defensible.

Engineered for stability

We design replication based on workload criticality and operational dependencies. Our approach typically includes:

Replication architecture design.
Definition of recovery objectives.
Regular testing and validation.
Failover and failback planning.
Monitoring and operational reporting.

Replication is integrated into broader recovery and governance frameworks.

Across environments

Replication as a Service supports:

Our services integrate seamlessly with hosting, cloud and connectivity services.

Because continuity demands discipline

Clients choose Fonicom because we:

Design replication with clear ownership.

Test recovery processes regularly.

Remain accountable during failover events.

This approach is trusted where interruption is not an option.

Indicators worth considering

Downtime has immediate business impact.
Recovery time objectives are aggressive.
Data loss tolerance is minimal.
Failover must be controlled and repeatable.

These suggest replication should be part of the recovery strategy.

Maintain operations under pressure

Without improvisation.

Replication as a Service ensures critical systems remain available when incidents occur. We help organisations implement continuity services they can depend on.

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