TVG helps executives build and validate disaster recovery strategies that actually work under real-world conditions — not just satisfy an auditor. Our team has seen what happens when the plan is needed and isn't ready.
No one plans to need their DR plan. Which is exactly why untested plans, outdated documentation, and RTOs that were never validated are so common — and so costly when they finally matter. Our team has seen what happens when the plan fails under real conditions. That experience is what drives our advisory approach.
Most DR plans are written to satisfy compliance requirements, not operational realities. An untested plan is a false sense of security that surfaces at the worst possible time.
Systems change. Staff turns over. The DR plan doesn't update itself. Three-year-old recovery procedures are dangerous in a real incident.
An auditor signing off on your DR documentation is not the same as your organization being able to recover. Our team validates the difference.
Our team evaluates your existing documentation against your actual environment — identifying gaps between what the plan says and what will actually happen under incident conditions.
Structured DR scenario exercises with your leadership team — stress-testing your plan before a real event does it for you.
When DRaaS or backup solutions are needed, our team sources competing options from providers with proven delivery track records, matches capability to your actual RTO and RPO requirements, and oversees implementation. TVG advises; your chosen provider delivers.
The TVG team works with executives across industries — from healthcare and legal to manufacturing and beyond. Our advisors have operated inside these environments firsthand. When your industry carries specific regulatory requirements, we bring that framework knowledge directly to your engagement.
HIPAA, PHI risk, vendor BAA review
Client confidentiality, data governance
OT/IT convergence, operational continuity
Nonprofits, energy, construction, financial services, and more
If the answer is "I'm not sure" — that's exactly where TVG starts.