The Pune-born unicorn that bet everything on backup with zero infrastructure — 75 of the Fortune 500, a staffed SOC on the backup estate, and the category’s first useful AI copilot. This hub is your complete intel file.
The company, at a glance
Quick answer
Druva is the 100% SaaS answer to data protection — and one of India's proudest software exports: founded 2008 in Pune by Jaspreet Singh and Milind Borate (the name is Sanskrit — Dhruva, the Pole Star), now Sunnyvale-headquartered, $2B+ valued, ~7,500 customers including 75 of the Fortune 500. The Druva Data Security Cloud runs entirely on AWS with zero customer infrastructure: hybrid data-centre workloads, SaaS apps (M365, Google Workspace, Salesforce, Entra ID), endpoints (the inSync heritage), AWS/Azure cloud workloads and a cyber-resilience layer with 24/7 Managed Data Detection & Response — plus Dru, the category's first genuinely useful backup AI copilot.
The complete Data Security Cloud — every linked card is a full intel page, and none of it runs on your infrastructure.
VMware to Oracle, zero infrastructure.
VMware, Hyper-V, Windows/Linux servers, NAS, SQL and Oracle protected by a platform you never patch, size or upgrade — the data centre's backup, finally someone else's ops.
SaaS data, protected SaaS-natively.
Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, Salesforce and Entra ID with air-gapped copies outside the vendors' blast radius — the shared-responsibility gap closed by a platform born in the same cloud era.
Every laptop, silently protected.
The endpoint backup that made Druva's name — Windows, macOS and Linux laptops with self-service restore, remote wipe, legal hold and OS-migration workflows at global-workforce scale.
Cloud-born protection for cloud-born apps.
EC2, EBS, RDS, S3 and Azure VMs/SQL with cross-account, cross-region and cross-cloud recovery — from the vendor that has run on AWS since day one.
A SOC for your backup estate.
Managed Data Detection & Response watching 24/7, Accelerated Ransomware Recovery with curated clean-point selection, quarantine for infected snapshots — and Dru Investigate for AI-driven incident forensics.
Ask your backup estate questions.
Natural-language operations, anomaly explanation, after-action reports and guided remediation — the first backup copilot that shipped rather than demoed, built on Amazon Bedrock.
FedRAMP-authorized government offerings — the compliance ceiling that tells regulated buyers everything about the platform's posture.
Legal hold, federated search and compliance monitoring across endpoints and SaaS — the governance layer riding the same copies.
Backup platforms accumulated estates — media servers, proxies, appliances, refresh cycles. Druva bet in 2008 that the whole thing should be a service — and rode the only-100%-SaaS position to a Gartner Leader slot rivals can’t copy without abandoning their business model.
Every workload family lands in the same AWS-native platform — one console, one dedupe pool, one security posture, zero customer infrastructure.
Global source-side deduplication against cloud storage — the economics that let a SaaS platform undercut appliance amortisation.
Air-gapped by architecture (your copies live in Druva's AWS, not your estate), encrypted end-to-end, immutable by default.
24/7 monitoring of the backup estate by Druva's own team — detection, triage and response guidance as a service.
GenAI across operations and investigations — built on Bedrock, shipped in 2023, expanding into agentic response.
Start with any workload family; they all land in the same platform — never a second estate to run.
Every claim on this hub traces to one of these public signals.
Backup & Data Protection Platforms
Backup & Recovery
~7,500 customers worldwide
One of India's proudest SaaS exports
Sequoia, CDPQ-backed
The compliance ceiling, cleared
Shipped 2023 on Amazon Bedrock
G2 & Gartner PI — the category's best
The security posture of the platform, demonstrated.
The Pune-born founder on the 100% SaaS bet.
The copilot in action — backup operations in natural language.
Trusted by 75 of the Fortune 500 and ~7,500 organisations
Two company-level views you won’t find on any vendor site — tap any dot for the rationale. The category-level grid lives on the product page.
Each dot is a Druva workload family: competitive position vs category momentum.
The inSync heritage — the reference product of endpoint backup, where Druva's story began.
Coverage depth vs operational lightness — the axis war of data protection.
The operational-lightness champion: nothing to run, patch or size — the 100% SaaS corner is Druva's alone among MQ Leaders. The thesis: backup should be an outcome, not an estate.
Positions are TechBag’s illustrative synthesis of public review-platform standings and vendor documentation — not a reproduction of any analyst graphic. Verify before relying on it.
Zero-jargon starting points, in reading order. Each links into the deep education on the product page.
Answer three questions; we’ll point you at the right workload family. No email required — this isn’t that kind of quiz.
1. What's the most pressing pain right now?
2. Which sentence sounds most like you?
3. What does success look like in 90 days?
No media servers, no proxies, no storage sizing — what disappears and what you give up.
Read →Why copies living in Druva's AWS — not your estate — changes the ransomware math.
Read →Laptops hold the work-in-progress nothing else captures — the case for the inSync pattern.
Read →The shared-responsibility gap across M365, Workspace and Salesforce.
Read →A managed SOC for the backup estate — detection, triage and response as a service.
Read →The honest matrix: vs Veeam, Commvault, Rubrik and the self-managed world.
Read →The procurement playbook TechBag runs with IT buyers — steps, licensing cheat-sheet, and the pitfalls that cost quarters.
Data centre TBs, SaaS users, endpoints, cloud workloads — the credits model prices consumption, so the census IS the quote. TechBag runs it free.
Zero infrastructure means Druva's cloud holds your copies — decide residency and egress questions up front, in writing.
Timed VM restore, endpoint self-service, M365 item recovery and a curated-recovery drill — outcomes, not backup jobs.
The staffed-SOC layer changes the operating model — decide whether 24/7 managed watching replaces or augments your team.
SaaS delivery means agents and connectors, not architecture projects — waves by workload family.
Credits true-ups, dedupe-ratio reviews and workload mix — TechBag stays your single throat to choke, GST invoicing throughout.
| Product | Licensing model | How you enter | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hybrid Workloads | Credits — consumption per TB | Source-dedupe economics; no infra cost line | Data centres tired of backup estates |
| SaaS Apps | Per user / month | Per-app SKUs, bundle-friendly | M365/Workspace/Salesforce estates |
| Endpoints | Per user / month | The inSync heritage pricing | Distributed workforces |
| MDDR / Cyber | Service tier attach | The staffed-SOC layer | Lean-team ransomware readiness |
Credits and per-user pricing across the families — TechBag runs the census, negotiates the mix and reviews consumption.
100% SaaS means Druva's AWS holds your copies — region options exist, but get residency and egress terms in writing before the PoC, not after.
The SaaS model deletes infrastructure, ops and refresh line items — TCO comparisons that ignore those flatter the self-managed rivals.
The endpoint estate is usually bigger and more valuable than assumed — census actual laptops, not directory guesses.
If nobody watches backups at 3 a.m., the anomaly alerts are decoration — the managed layer is the point for lean teams.
Credits consumption rides dedupe ratios — review them quarterly or pay for entropy.
The flagship intel page carries an 8-question vendor checklist and an automation-savings calculator:
Bring your device counts and current tool bills — a TechBag advisor models the whole decision for you.
Book a discovery call →Six trends with momentum scores (TechBag’s read of analyst and market signals) — and what each means for your next decision.
*Directionally consistent with public analyst forecasts; verify exact figures before quoting. The takeaway: BaaS and managed detection compound fastest — exactly the model Druva bet the company on in 2008.
SaaS-delivered protection removes servers, proxies and storage sizing — the fastest-growing consumption model in the category.
What it means for you
Ask what you'd rather run: backup, or nothing.
MDDR-style services put staffed SOCs on backup estates — lean teams get 24/7 watching without hiring it.
What it means for you
If the alert fires at 3 a.m., who reads it? Buy the answer.
Dru shipped GenAI operations in 2023 while rivals demoed — natural-language ops and investigations are becoming table stakes.
What it means for you
Ask every vendor what their AI actually DOES today.
Copies living outside the customer estate defeat the delete-the-backups playbook structurally.
What it means for you
The stolen-admin tabletop should be unwinnable for the attacker.
M365/Salesforce backup adoption compounds as shared-responsibility incidents pile up.
What it means for you
Vendor retention is not backup.
Druva (Pune, 2008) proved India could build a global data-protection unicorn — the Pole Star for the wave that followed.
What it means for you
India-engineered means timezone-native support and market-aware pricing.
Open any of the five intel pages for the deep dive, or bring your estate census and let a TechBag advisor build the case with you — quotes, PoCs, GST invoicing and lifecycle support included.
Stats, positions and figures are illustrative syntheses of public materials; verify before purchase.