Cloud & Infrastructure Solutions

Why us

Capacity That Expands Automatically

Electrosol manages that infrastructure for you — cloud and hybrid hosting, server and database administration, security, and round-the-clock monitoring — so your systems stay up, your data stays safe, and you’re not relying on hoping nothing breaks.

Custom Cloud & Infrastructure Solutions

Behind every website, app, or system your business relies on, there’s infrastructure — servers, storage, security, backups — quietly doing the work of keeping everything online. Most of the time nobody thinks about it. Then a server goes down at the worst possible moment, or a backup that was supposedly running for years turns out to have silently failed, and suddenly it’s the only thing anyone’s thinking about.

Breadth

What's Included

In plain terms, this is the “plumbing” behind your digital operations: where your website and software actually run, how your data is stored and protected, and who’s watching to make sure it all keeps working. You don’t need to understand the technical details any more than you need to understand how your office’s electrical wiring works — you just need it to reliably work, and someone competent to call when it doesn’t.

Cloud & hybrid hosting

Renting server capacity that expands automatically when traffic spikes (like a sale day on your online store) and scales back down afterward, so you’re not paying for capacity you only need one day a year.

Server & database administration

Someone actively keeping your servers and databases healthy — installing security updates, fixing slowdowns, watching disk space — instead of only noticing something’s wrong when the system crashes.

Scalable storage

Extra storage space that’s added automatically as your files, records, or customer data grow, instead of your team getting an “out of space” error and scrambling to fix it.

Security & compliance

Protective measures like firewalls, access controls, and encryption set up around your systems, plus making sure you meet relevant industry data-protection standards (useful if you handle customer payment or personal data).

24/7 NOC monitoring

A team actively watching your systems around the clock (nights, weekends, holidays), so if a server starts struggling at 2am, someone’s already fixing it before your customers wake up and notice.

Backup & disaster recovery

Regular copies of your data stored safely, plus a tested plan for restoring everything quickly if something goes wrong — a server failure, a ransomware attack, accidental deletion — instead of finding out during an actual emergency that the backup doesn’t work.

Performance optimization

Tuning servers and databases so your applications run fast under real-world load, not just in a quiet test environment.

Migration services

Moving your systems from outdated or unreliable infrastructure to modern, secure environments without a disruptive cutover.

mission

Getting Started Without Overcommitting

We build and manage infrastructure on established, proven platforms — including AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud for cloud hosting, alongside standard database systems like MySQL and SQL Server. For monitoring and security, we use industry-standard tools for uptime tracking, intrusion detection, and automated backup verification. As with our other services, the specific platform choice depends on your existing systems, budget, and compliance needs — not a fixed preference on our end.

Commitment

Who This Is For

Businesses currently hosting critical systems on unreliable or aging infrastructure. Companies that have never actually tested whether their backups work. E-commerce businesses that experience seasonal or unpredictable traffic spikes. Any business handling sensitive customer data that needs to meet security and compliance standards. And growing companies whose current setup won’t scale with them much longer.

RECOVERY

What a Real Disaster Recovery Plan Actually Includes

“We have backups” is not the same as “we have a disaster recovery plan.” A real plan answers specific questions before disaster strikes, not during it: How quickly can we actually get back online (this is called Recovery Time Objective, or RTO)? How much data, at most, are we willing to lose if something happens right this minute (Recovery Point Objective, or RPO)? Who is responsible for what during an incident, and how do we reach them at 3am on a Sunday? Has the recovery process actually been tested end-to-end, or does it just exist on paper?

We build disaster recovery plans that answer all of these questions concretely, then test them — because a recovery plan nobody has ever actually run through is really just a hope, dressed up in technical language.

Our work process

How We Work

Picture an e-commerce business that hosts its own website on a single server sitting in a back office, with backups that get manually copied to an external hard drive “when someone remembers.” One Black Friday, traffic spikes well beyond what that single server can handle, the site slows to a crawl, and the business loses a chunk of its biggest sales day of the year. A few months later, the server itself fails — and the last backup on that external drive is four months old.

That’s the exact scenario this service exists to prevent. We’d move that business onto cloud hosting that automatically scales up for traffic spikes and back down afterward, add 24/7 monitoring so a struggling server gets flagged and addressed before it becomes an outage, and set up automated, tested backups so “the backup didn’t work” is never something anyone discovers during an actual emergency.

Reviewing your current setup (or lack of one) to understand what’s actually at risk and what needs to change first.

Choosing cloud, hybrid, or a mix based on your actual needs, compliance requirements, and budget — not a one-size-fits-all recommendation.

Moving your systems onto the new infrastructure with minimal disruption, usually planned outside peak business hours.

Setting up firewalls, access controls, and automated, tested backup and disaster recovery processes.

24/7 NOC oversight watching for issues, performance degradation, and security threats.

Periodic check-ins to ensure your infrastructure is still scaled and configured correctly as your business changes.

INDUSTRIES

Industries We Serve

Retail & e-commerce
Financial & professional services
Healthcare & wellness
Logistics & Distribution
SaaS & software companies
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FAQ

FAQ’s

Common questions on software development services

Cloud hosting runs entirely on shared or dedicated cloud infrastructure, while hybrid combines cloud with on-premises systems — useful if you have compliance needs or legacy systems that can’t move yet. We help you choose based on your actual requirements, not a sales preference.

Our NOC monitoring runs 24/7, and response times are defined in your SLA before the engagement starts, so there’s no ambiguity during an incident.

Both. Backups that have never been tested aren’t a real recovery plan — we test recovery procedures on a regular schedule.

We plan migrations to minimize disruption, typically scheduling the actual cutover during low-traffic windows, with a rollback plan in place in case anything doesn’t go as expected.

We configure infrastructure with encryption, access controls, and monitoring aligned to the relevant standards for your industry, and we’re upfront about what’s required to stay compliant as regulations evolve.

That’s the point of scalable cloud infrastructure — capacity adjusts as your usage grows, rather than requiring a disruptive re-platforming project every time you hit a new level of traffic or data volume.

No — we can manage infrastructure fully on your behalf, or work alongside an existing internal IT team, depending on what you already have in place.

We base the recommendation on your existing tools, your team’s familiarity, cost considerations for your specific usage pattern, and any compliance requirements — rather than defaulting to one provider regardless of fit.

Your service-level agreement spells out uptime commitments, response times for incidents, and what happens if those commitments aren’t met — so expectations are documented and clear from day one, not left to interpretation during an outage.

Yes — a cost and capacity review is often the first thing we do, and it’s common to find businesses paying for far more (or in some cases far less secure) infrastructure than they actually need.