AI coming to Zerto with Update 9

Meet the HPE Zerto AI Assistant: Smarter Data Protection, Right Where You Work

Data protection teams are under constant pressure. In complex environments, the information they need is rarely in one place — system status and alerts live in one tool, documentation and fixes in another, and recovery data somewhere else entirely. That fragmentation costs time, and in a recovery scenario, time is everything.

HPE Zerto’s new AI assistant, introduced in Zerto U9, is designed to close that gap.

Note. Zerto U9 is available now…

One Assistant, Every Answer

The HPE Zerto AI assistant brings together three critical sources of knowledge in a single, unified experience:

  • Live system data — real-time data protection signals from your environment
  • Official HPE Zerto product documentation — authoritative guidance you can trust
  • The HPE Zerto support knowledge base — tried-and-tested resolutions to known issues

Instead of switching between dashboards, knowledge bases, and ticketing systems, teams get contextual answers surfaced directly inside their workflow — grounded in what’s actually happening in their environment right now.

What It Does for Your Team

Understand Your Data Protection Health at a Glance

Rather than interpreting raw alerts and status codes, teams can ask the assistant plain-language questions and get clear, actionable answers about current data protection health — including what’s at risk and why.

Assess SLA Impact Without the Guesswork

When an issue arises, understanding its blast radius matters. The AI assistant helps teams quickly assess the potential impact to SLAs, so they can prioritise their response and communicate clearly with stakeholders — without needing to manually correlate data across multiple systems.

Follow Recommended Next Steps Immediately

The assistant doesn’t just flag problems — it links known issues to recommended resolutions, guiding teams through the right next steps without requiring them to hunt through documentation or escalate prematurely.

More Flexible, More Nuanced Reporting

Beyond troubleshooting, the assistant supports more flexible reporting through nuanced, natural-language summaries — making it easier to communicate recovery readiness to leadership or compliance teams.

The Outcome: Signals Into Decisions

The headline benefit of the HPE Zerto AI assistant is simple: it turns signals into decisions. Faster troubleshooting, clearer SLA and risk visibility, and greater confidence in recovery readiness — all without leaving the tools your team already works in.

In an industry where recovery time objectives are measured in minutes, removing the friction between “something is wrong” and “here’s what to do about it” isn’t just a quality-of-life improvement. It’s a competitive advantage.

Business readiness for a ransomware attack

The growing threat

The threat from ransomware is growing with the sophistication of the attacks – and technical ability of the attackers – constantly challenging the security measures implemented by businesses striving to protect their systems and data in an increasingly hostile cyber environment.

It’s no longer a case of if a business is attacked, but when, and, at that point, how ready is the business to recover effectively and efficiently from such an attack? There are few second chances when the stakes are so high.

A recent Sophos survey indicated 59% of global businesses were hit by some form of ransomware. 94% of businesses indicated that the attackers had attempted to compromise their backup systems, with 57% being successful.

The time to assess the ability of a business to fully recover has never been more urgent, with a stress on the proactiveness of that preparation time. Identifying any flaws in the plan, or recovery technology deployed, are crucial tasks in a business fitness test.

Fully testing the recoverability of an organisation requires frequent testing – and this can only be carried out effectively if the testing process is non-disruptive, quick, simple and encompasses the business’ entire system and data. Crucially, the skillset and prior experience of staff charged with conducting a successful recovery needs to be factored in for a requirement so nuanced and potentially infrequent.

When the chaos and stress of a business-threatening ransomware attack is unfolding, discovering unnoticed or overlooked flaws in the recovery plan – alongside a lack of skills and experience in business recovery – is irresponsible business practice. Having the confidence to invoke an extremely well-tested and orchestrated business recovery process is critical. When security is compromised this could be the only time to thwart the attempts of cyber criminals to extort significant sums from the business, often even business-ending.

Cloud provider effectiveness

MSPs are ideally positioned to offer DRaaS and BaaS platforms that provide non-disruptive disaster recovery testing, enabling teams charged with business recovery to carry out full and frequent tests without impacting production environments. Additionally, the separation of cloud recovery systems from the production environments adds another layer of much-needed protection.

MSPs specialising in disaster recovery technologies can significantly improve the recovery of an organisation when struck by ransomware. MSPs will have the experience, exposure and expertise to advise on effective techniques and services to deploy, balancing business requirements with available budgets, keeping those achievable RTOs and RPOs realistic.

MSPs can remove many of the concerns for organisations when considering and budgeting for disaster recovery solutions, including; the capital cost of the hardware and software required; the ability to scale up or down as business needs change; the necessary skills required to maintain such a system and invoke a recovery when needed; and the ongoing maintenance costs and inevitable renewal costs.

An update to your approach

Now is the time to shift thinking within IT teams, but also the wider business, about the potential for risk and the collaborative efforts required to protect the business from what will become an undeniable set of threats.

The recommended rhythm and cadence of testing might seem unrealistic, or even unachievable with the current technology deployed within a business. That’s ok. What we strongly believe is that by setting in place a new standard – even if simply an improvement on the status quo at first – businesses can create a necessary shift in mindset towards recoverability and data usability. Setting this new operational standard will undoubtedly place the business in a better state of readiness to recover from a major issue, as and when it happens.