List of Commvault Disaster Recovery Customers
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Since 2010, our global team of researchers has been studying Commvault Disaster Recovery customers around the world, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions and perhaps the rise and fall of certain vendors and their products on a quarterly basis.
Each quarter our research team identifies companies that have purchased Commvault Disaster Recovery for Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) from public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources, including the customer size, industry, location, implementation status, partner involvement, LOB Key Stakeholders and related IT decision-makers contact details.
Companies using Commvault Disaster Recovery for Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) include: BGC Construction, a Australia based Construction and Real Estate organisation with 4000 employees and revenues of $2.50 billion, Cepheid, a United States based Professional Services organisation with 6000 employees and revenues of $731.0 million, University of Canberra, a Australia based Education organisation with 1598 employees and revenues of $221.0 million, Leipziger Messe, a Germany based Professional Services organisation with 395 employees and revenues of $105.0 million, Shomera, a Ireland based Manufacturing organisation with 25 employees and revenues of $2.0 million and many others.
Contact us if you need a completed and verified list of companies using Commvault Disaster Recovery, including the breakdown by industry (21 Verticals), Geography (Region, Country, State, City), Company Size (Revenue, Employees, Asset) and related IT Decision Makers, Key Stakeholders, business and technology executives responsible for the software purchases.
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| Logo | Customer | Industry | Empl. | Revenue | Country | Vendor | Application | Category | When | SI | Insight |
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BGC Construction | Construction and Real Estate | 4000 | $2.5B | Australia | Commvault | Commvault Disaster Recovery | Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) | 2021 | n/a |
In 2021, BGC Construction deployed Commvault Disaster Recovery as part of a Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) program to ensure recovery readiness across its diversified construction and materials operations. The implementation leveraged Commvault Complete Data Protection paired with Microsoft Azure to provide a unified protection layer for 2PB of data, reduced to 249TB after deduplication, and to cover Microsoft 365, Salesforce, Oracle Cloud, VMware virtual machines, MySQL, Microsoft Exchange, SharePoint and Teams.
The implementation included platform-specific agents and core Commvault capabilities for backup, deduplication, cataloging, rapid restore orchestration and analytics via Commvault Command Center. Functional workflows were configured to support mailbox and file restores from Microsoft 365 and on-premises sources in minutes, automated verification and recovery testing, and workload migration automation to accelerate recovery and planned migrations.
Integrations were explicitly built with Microsoft Azure for cloud storage and platform hosting, Microsoft 365 and SaaS applications including Salesforce and Oracle Cloud for application-level protection, and with the on-premises VMware estate and MySQL databases for VM and database protection. Commvault Partner Lumen IT provided implementation advice and operational support during rollout, and operational coverage focused on the Australian estate with compliance requirements for long term project records and warranty data.
Governance and operational changes centered on using Commvault Command Center analytics to simplify verification and ongoing DR testing, reducing manual recovery validation effort. Outcomes reported by BGC include consolidation of three backup solutions onto the Commvault platform with A$150,000 in TCO savings, a 62% improvement in RTO and RPO, recovery times shortened from hours to minutes, and a tenfold reduction in time spent on data management, improving availability for natural disaster and cyberattack scenarios.
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Cepheid | Professional Services | 6000 | $731M | United States | Commvault | Commvault Disaster Recovery | Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) | 2021 | n/a |
In 2021, Cepheid implemented Commvault Disaster Recovery, a Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) application. The deployment was targeted at operational IT support for the Newark, California site and centered on protecting Windows and Linux server estates while supporting day to day help desk functions. Implementation activities documented included creation of backups, executing systems recovery, validating jobs, and monitoring backup reports as part of routine IT operations.
Configuration and functional scope for Commvault Disaster Recovery included backup orchestration, scheduled job execution, automated job validation, and centralized backup data management. The implementation supported imaging and OS installation workflows used by desktop and server provisioning, file level and system level restore workflows, and report driven validation processes. Commvault Disaster Recovery was used to maintain recovery runbooks and to surface job and report status to technical support staff.
Operational governance assigned responsibility to help desk and IT support staff who performed job validation, systems recovery actions, and report review, and who maintained Windows and Linux servers and user objects in Active Directory. Processes emphasized ticket driven restore requests, routine validation of backup jobs, and coordination between imaging, workstation provisioning, and DR restore procedures. The narrative ties Cepheid, Commvault Disaster Recovery, Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS), and IT operations into a clear implementation footprint for ongoing backup and recovery activities.
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Leipziger Messe | Professional Services | 395 | $105M | Germany | Commvault | Commvault Disaster Recovery | Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) | 2019 | n/a |
In 2019, Leipziger Messe implemented Commvault Disaster Recovery and adopted Commvault Complete Data Protection to establish a Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) capability for its event operations. The implementation targeted the company IT Infrastructure and Event Services function and covered protection of key assets including 65TB deduplicated data on disk, 700TB on tape, Oracle Database with Real Application Clusters across six instances, 140 VMware virtual machines, eight Microsoft SQL databases, multiple MariaDB and MongoDB databases, and up to 1,000 HCL Notes and HCL Domino databases.
The deployment configured Commvault Complete Data Protection as a single-pane backup and recovery platform, enabling automated daily disaster recovery copies, deduplication, encryption, and tape copy workflows for offline retention. Backups were written to disk and NetApp NFS in a third data center and then copied to tape for offsite storage, while integration with Microsoft Azure was included in the backup environment. The solution centralized monitoring and management of backups for all applications and systems through the Commvault interface.
Integration scope included native support for VMware, Oracle RAC, Microsoft SQL, MariaDB, MongoDB, and HCL Domino, plus NetApp File System interoperability to simplify operational monitoring. Leipziger Messe ran the Commvault environment in parallel with the existing IBM TSM system during a staged migration, the cutover completed in a 20 day transition. Commvault partner WBS-IT Service GmbH installed the software and continues to provide support services post implementation, and the IT team performs quarterly recovery tests to validate recoverability.
Operational governance established automated backup schedules, encrypted offsite retention for up to 100 days, and quarterly testing to ensure data availability for time sensitive events and exhibitions. Reported results from the deployment include an 80 percent reduction in time spent managing disaster recovery backups, a 50 percent improvement in backup performance, and an 85 percent reduction in support services cost to approximately $23,000 per year, while minimizing employee interruption and supporting continuous event operations.
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Shomera | Manufacturing | 25 | $2M | Ireland | Commvault | Commvault Disaster Recovery | Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) | 2020 | n/a |
In 2020 Shomera implemented Commvault Disaster Recovery to strengthen business continuity. The deployment provisioned Commvault Disaster Recovery as a Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) capability to support IT operations and business continuity for the company's manufacturing functions in Ireland.
The implementation focused on core DRaaS capabilities typical for the category, including centralized backup orchestration, policy-driven replication, automated failover orchestration, and scheduled recovery testing. Configuration included a unified management console for backup cataloging and recovery workflows, agent-based protection for servers and virtualized workloads, and encryption for data-in-transit and at-rest, aligning operational controls with disaster recovery procedures. The Commvault Disaster Recovery deployment emphasized repeatable recovery playbooks and automated runbooks to reduce manual intervention during incident response.
Operational scope covered Shomera's IT and operations teams, with governance changes to formalize DR testing cadence and incident escalation workflows. Role-based access and a centralized audit trail were introduced to support operational oversight and compliance activities. The documented outcome from the engagement is improved business continuity and disaster recovery assurance achieved through the Commvault Disaster Recovery implementation.
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University of Canberra | Education | 1598 | $221M | Australia | Commvault | Commvault Disaster Recovery | Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) | 2014 | n/a |
In 2014 University of Canberra implemented Commvault Disaster Recovery in the Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) category to externalize disaster recovery copies and long term retention onto AWS object storage. The deployment responded to a near term surge in research data and long term retention needs, leveraging Commvault backup software with Amazon S3 and Glacier to store disaster recovery copies and support retention policies.
UC upgraded its backup architecture by adopting Commvault HyperScale Software, moving from a traditional scale-up approach toward a scale-out architecture that removes dependence on multiple dedicated media agents and discrete storage silos. The implementation consolidated principal DR capabilities, including backup orchestration, scale-out storage pools, cloud tiering to S3 and Glacier, and centralized retention policy enforcement under Commvault HyperScale.
Integrations were explicit and operational, Commvault Disaster Recovery was configured to tier and archive data to Amazon S3 and Glacier, and to integrate with the university’s Nutanix hyperconverged infrastructure where approximately 90% of workloads run. This allowed the university to reduce separate media server complexity and align DR copies with existing Nutanix-hosted workloads across research and administrative functions.
Governance and rollout were led by the Associate Director for Vendor and Operations, Justin Mason, who evaluated hyperconverged and scale-out options and selected Commvault HyperScale for its cost and integration profile. The program emphasized centralized management, simplified capacity expansion via scale-out nodes, and cloud-based retention workflows to manage rapid research data growth across the institution.
Documented outcomes from the configuration and cloud strategy included efficiency and cost savings tied to cloud archival and a stated reduction in total cost of ownership exceeding A$390,000 over three years, alongside lower storage cost and operational simplification reported by the university.
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