Druva Expands Cyber Resilience to MicrosoftDruva Expands Cyber Resilience to Microsoft Power PlatformNew support helps enterprises secure critical assets and reduce risk from AI-driven workflowsDruva announced support for Microsoft Power Platform, extending cyber resilience to a growing layer of business applications, workflows, and analytics. With this launch, Druva introduces support for Microsoft Power BI as the first step in helping organizations secure and recover the assets that teams depend on for reporting, operational visibility, and decision-making. As organizations use AI and low-code tools to build applications, automate workflows, and generate insight, Microsoft Power Platform is now deeply embedded across the enterprise. These AI-powered workflows and assets are now central to modern operations, but they also introduce new risks when flawed automation, unintended changes, or compromised logic lead to lost, altered, or corrupted data and configurations. With support for Power Platform, Druva is designed to help address that risk with cloud-native protection, recovery, and security for the reporting and analytics assets where the impact of AI-driven workflows is often most visible. “Organizations are moving quickly to use AI in more practical ways across the business, and that makes resilience even more important,” said Stephen Manley, CTO at Druva. “Druva helps customers improve visibility and recovery readiness across Microsoft Power Platform, starting with Power BI, so they can reduce risk without slowing innovation.” Built for business continuity and resilience Support for Microsoft Power Platform builds on Druva’s deep integrations across the Microsoft ecosystem, including Microsoft 365, Microsoft Entra ID and Active Directory, Microsoft Dynamics 365, and core Azure services. Key capabilities and outcomes include:
Druva also helps preserve the metadata, structure, and relationships behind Power BI assets so recovered reports and dashboards can be restored in useful context. This information ties into Dru MetaGraph, Druva’s graph-intelligence layer, and strengthens its ability to correlate activity, dependencies, and configurations across workloads. The result is richer context for investigation, faster analysis, and a more complete view of risk across data environments. “For many organizations, Power BI has become a core part of how the business monitors performance, supports operations, and informs decisions,” said Johnny Yu, Research Manager, Infrastructure Software Platforms, at IDC. “Downtime for these assets aren’t merely inconvenient – it’s consequential. Druva’s Power BI addresses this business-critical layer of the Microsoft ecosystem, helping enterprises reduce operational risk and better support continuity across the business.” Support for Microsoft Power BI is now generally available. Support for Microsoft Power Apps and Power Automate will be available later this year. Source: Druva media announcement | |