Datalogic is a prolific innovator. Its devices for data capture and process automation can be found in stores, factories and many other locations around the world. To keep pushing the boundaries of its sector, the company is always looking to accelerate innovation.
“Our vision is to shape the future with intelligence and innovation,” said Roberto Mondonico, Group CIO at Datalogic. “To make this happen, we employ extremely talented people and invest in tools to help them turn brilliant ideas into effective products. On the IT team, we’re under constant pressure to provide the technology they need as quickly as possible.”
With R&D specialists and engineers located all around the world, Datalogic saw an opportunity to help its brightest minds work together. However, it had to overcome the challenge of sharing data over large distances first.
“Both our R&D and engineering teams use tons of data in their everyday work,” said Roberto Mondonico. “If they were going to collaborate across borders, we needed to give them the ability to access shared datasets fast, but replicating them between local data centers would become expensive, soon.”
So, Datalogic’s cloud strategy was born. By moving to a centralized cloud-based environment with support for machine- and deep-learning, the company saw a chance to promote better use of expertise across the company.
“We settled on Google Cloud as our target cloud,” said Roberto Mondonico. “Now, we had to plan the migration, which is no small task for a data-intensive company like ours that values speed of innovation above all else.”
To facilitate its move to the cloud, Datalogic chose the Veeam Data Platform, which enables low-risk, straightforward migration of data workloads between on-premises and cloud environments. Veeam is also the company’s data protection solution of choice.
To accelerate the migration further, the IT team used Veeam to make replicas of each of its virtual machines (VMs) and powered them on in Google Cloud.
“With Veeam, we were able to migrate a huge number of VMs in a remarkably short period,” said Roberto Mondonico. “We’re considering a multi-cloud strategy for the future and we know that Veeam will support us there too, since it makes moving data between different onpremises and cloud platform super easy.”
For over eight years, Datalogic has relied on Veeam to protect its mission-critical information. Today, the company has 400TB of data; though this is growing fast as a result of Datalogic’s R&D and engineering activities.
“The IT manager for our U.S. operations recommended we use Veeam across the Datalogic group, and we adopted it with gusto,” stated Roberto Mondonico. “With Veeam, we back up our remaining on-premises systems and everything hosted in Google Cloud. It gives us the ability to protect 100% of our data with a back-up success rate that’s near-perfect.”
Datalogic now has centralized control and visibility of data protection across the company. The insights provided by Veeam are paying dividends, helping the IT team to optimize use of resources, while and simplifying compliance with regulatory requirements.
With Veeam, Datalogic ramped up its ability to recover fast from significant incidents — even a severe cyber-attack. Rather than relying on its own assessment of its risk level, the company calls in a third-party evaluator each year to run an evaluation.
“Cyber-security is a growing priority for us, so we call in a different company to conduct penetration testing every year,” said Angelo Iannello, CISO at Datalogic. “So far, none have been able to access our Veeam backup servers, so they’ve rated us very highly. Looking ahead, we plan to use Veeam o create an additional backup in the cloud. Whatever we decide to do next, Veeam is allowing us to seize control of our data so we can succeed.”