Redefining the Recovery category.
Transforming broken recovery process into an automated orchestration for peace of mind.
Seamless Recovery™ orchestrating business continuity.
Platform demo
Video coming soon
What Seamless Does
Platform-level tools designed for orchestration and validation across your existing stack.
- Containment-to-Recovery orchestration
- Recovery sequencing
- Operational state validation
- Snapshot rollbacks often disrupted by ransomware
- Endpoint security and detection tools
- Identity and access layers
- Backup / snapshot systems
- SIEM / logging and incident workflows
- Cloud and hybrid infrastructure environments
Designed to integrate with your existing stack — without replacing it.
The Structural Cyber Gap
Why modern security stops attacks — but still can't restore operations.
Great at stopping. Not built to restore.
- Recovery depends on external restore methods
- Endpoint tools detect and roll back malicious threats — but restoration relies on external methods
- Methods that rely on local snapshots are disrupted by ransomware
The threat is stopped, but operations are not restored.
It enforces policy. It doesn't restore.
- DLP can track file and data movement
- DLP can detect exfiltration, not stop it
- DLP cannot restore data
DLP enforces policy — it doesn't recover the data asset.
Precision detection.
- FIM enforces policy — it does not recover data
- Detects file and data corruption
- Monitors file/directory changes, software installs, and sensitivity
FIM detects data corruption — it can't restore it.
The recovery tax.
- Backups and backup systems targeted by ransomware
- Storage preserves data — but cannot automatically select a safe operational restore point
Backups don't provide peace of mind.
Built for Modern Organisations
Complex environments with interdependent systems, compliance requirements, and zero tolerance for extended downtime.
Operational continuity and enterprise-grade recovery without dedicated recovery teams.
Fast-moving teams that need resilience built in from day one — not bolted on after the first incident.