Acronis
Acronis is a data protection and cybersecurity software vendor that delivers integrated backup, Disaster Recovery (DR), endpoint protection, and secure file services for enterprises, service providers, and SMBs across hybrid IT environments.
- Integrated cyber protection platform combining backup, cybersecurity, and management (data protection, endpoint security)
- Workload backup and recovery for physical, virtual, cloud, and endpoint systems (data protection)
- Ransomware protection, anti-malware, and endpoint security features (endpoint security)
- Solutions for MSPs and hosting providers to deliver data protection as a managed service (managed services enablement)
- Cloud-based management console for centralized policy, monitoring, and orchestration (IT operations management)
More About Acronis
Acronis focuses on what it describes as cyber protection, combining data protection and cybersecurity controls in a single platform used by enterprises, small and midsize organizations, and managed service providers. Its offerings are typically deployed to protect workloads across on-premises (on-prem) data centers, branch offices, public cloud infrastructures, and remote endpoints, with a central management layer that coordinates policies and operations. The core positioning is to provide a consolidated stack for backup, DR, endpoint security, and secure file access so that organizations can manage data resilience and threat defense under one architecture.
At the solution level, Acronis provides backup and recovery (data protection) capabilities for servers, virtual machines, cloud instances, applications, and user endpoints. These tools usually support image-based backup, file-level backup, and recovery workflows that span local storage and cloud repositories. Many deployments use Acronis services to meet business continuity and DR objectives, enabling restoration of systems after hardware failure, data corruption, or cyber incidents. Support for multiple platforms, including common operating systems and virtualization platforms, allows use in heterogeneous enterprise environments.
On the security side, Acronis integrates anti-malware, ransomware protection, and exploit mitigation (endpoint security) into its platform, designed to detect and block malicious activities that target data and backup repositories. This dual focus aims to ensure that backup data remains both available and trustworthy. Capabilities such as behavioral analysis, signature-based detection, and automatic rollback from clean backups are typically part of this security layer, working in conjunction with backup schedules and retention policies.
Acronis also targets managed service providers, hosting providers, and cloud resellers with multi-tenant management consoles and billing-aware workflows (managed services enablement). These capabilities allow service providers to deliver backup, DR, and endpoint security as subscription services to downstream customers. Role-Based Access Control (RBAC), tenant isolation, and usage reporting features are commonly used by providers to manage large customer bases across geographies.
From an architectural perspective, Acronis deployments usually involve lightweight agents installed on protected endpoints and workloads, controlled by a centralized management console that may run in the cloud or on-prem. Data can be stored in Acronis-operated cloud data centers, customer-owned infrastructure, or a hybrid of both. The platform typically employs secure communication protocols for data in transit and encryption for data at rest, aligned with enterprise security and compliance practices. For directory and marketplace classification, Acronis aligns with data protection and backup, DR as a service (DRaaS), endpoint security, secure collaboration and file services, and Managed Services Provider (MSP) enablement platforms.