Everything you need to know about email backups
Whether you're considering transferring your hosting service to us, or just concerned about security or compliance, it's important to know how to back up your emails.
Before you can make an effective plan, you'll need to understand a few important points about email hosting. This guide will take you step by step through the process of identifying how your email accounts are set up, creating your first local backup, configuring your mail client (email program) to use the best settings for your needs, and setting up secure encrypted cloud backups.
By the end of this guide, you will know:
- The most important aspect of managing your mail: Understanding the difference between POP3 and IMAP, the two options for for how your mail is set up.
- What a mail client is, and which version of which mail client you're using
- Where your emails are stored on your device
- What a 3-2-1 backup strategy is
- How to set up your mail client
- How to safely and securely backup up your email for:
- transfers
- safety, disaster recovery, and compliance
To make this guide as useful as possible, you can use the table of contents below to skip to the parts that apply to you. The essential steps are:
- Understand the difference between POP3 and IMAP
- Determine which mail client(s) you're using
- Perform a complete and safe local backup of your mailbox
- Adjust your mail client settings so that you're using the right settings for your needs
- Create and implement a regular backup schedule
Contents
Scenarios
Scenario: Transferring a domain to a new provider |
Esti is her family's go-to IT technician. Her parents want to move their domain and hosting to Imaginet. Esti knows that it's important to back up all emails before initiating the transfer, but she's not sure how to ensure that no emails are lost during the transfer process. |
Solution: Esti should:
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Scenario: Disaster recovery |
Luthando owns a small business. He already backs up his emails on his PC, as well as on an external hard drive which he stores safely at home, not at his business premises. However, Luthando has been worried about the increasing rates of floods and fires in his area. He fears that if something bad should happen, he may lose access to his data. |
Solution: Luthando needs Stratus Cloud Backup. He should also set up a schedule for:
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POP3 vs IMAP
Understanding the differences between POP3 and IMAP is the most important step toward taking control of your mail and performing a complete and safe backup.
POP3 | IMAP |
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Emails are downloaded.
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Emails are synced.
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Downloaded emails can be left on the server or removed from the server, and this behaviour is controlled by a setting in your mail client.
You can set your mail client to
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Emails are left on the server at least until you delete them from your mail client.
When you delete an email, the settings in your mail client will determine what happens to that mail on the server:
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Sent mail is not stored on the server. | Sent mail may or may not be stored on the server. |
If you've sorted your email into folders, these folders exist on your device, not on the server. | Your custom folders exist on your device, and may or may not exist on the server. |
Your emails are stored in your mail client as a database or a collection of files. Different mail clients and different versions of each mail client might store mail differently.
Mail clients
A mail client is the program you use to send and receive emails.
The most popular choices are Microsoft's Outlook, and Mozilla's Thunderbird.
Account settings are very similar in all mail clients, but the exact phrasing or name of each setting might differ between different programs, or between different versions of the same program.
Check your mail client version
The first step in backing up your emails is determining which version of which mail client you're using.
Outlook
Take a look at Which version of Outlook am I using to determine which Version of Outlook you're using.
Thunderbird
Click the main menu button, then go to the Help menu and choose Troubleshooting Information. In the new tab that opens, look for the version number under Application Basics.
Apple Mail
Open the Mail app, and click the Mail menu. Choose About Mail to see the version you're using.
Check whether your mail client is set up to use POP3 or IMAP
To find out which you're using, you'll need to check your email account settings. If you're not sure how to do this, click the name of your mail client below for instructions:
The backup process
The process for backing up your emails depends on your mail client, and what you want to achieve.
For all mail clients
If you want to transfer your domain and hosting
Your emails can not be transferred automatically, and we therefore recommend backing up your mail before the transfer begins. If you've been using POP3 to receive your mail, you already have local copies of your messages, but it's still a good idea to make a backup. If you've been using IMAP, we've written a guides on creating local email backups with various mail clients. Once you've backed up your emails and website, you're ready to begin the transfer process, and our helpdesk agents and customer service team are ready to assist you during every step of the process.
If you want backups for disaster recovery
- Choose up a Stratus Cloud Backup service
- Contact Imaginet and inform us of the package you've chosen.
- Our helpdesk agents will guide you through the process of setting up your Stratus Backup service.
- Configure the backup program to back up your PST file according to a schedule that suits you.
- See the following section for tips for creating a disaster recovery plan.
If you want encrypted backups for POPIA compliance
- Choose up a Stratus Cloud Backup service
- Contact Imaginet and inform us of the package you've chosen.
- Our helpdesk agents will guide you through the process of setting up your Stratus Backup service.
- Create a strong password for your encrypted backup. Your emails will be backed up and the data in the cloud will be encrypted with POPIA-compliant AES encryption.
- Configure the backup program to back up your data according to a schedule that suits you.
If you're using Outlook
We do not recommend using Outlook. The data files it uses to store your emails (PST and OST files) are incredibly prone to corruption and data loss; so common in fact that Microsoft provides special software for for "fixing common problems". Your valuable data should not be susceptible to so many "common problems" that you need special tools. If you do need to use Outlook though, we've got your back. Take a look at the info below for guidance specific to Outlook.
If you want to transfer your domain and hosting
For IMAP accounts
- Configure Outlook to download complete messages
- Create a new PST file by following the steps below.
- Copy and paste your emails and/or folders from your current inbox to the new PST folder in Outlook.
- Back up your website and send the backup to Imaginet for upload.
- Transfer your domain.
- Set up new POP3 email accounts in Outlook using the settings provided by Imaginet.
- Configure your mail client to delete email from the server after a suitable amount of time.
For POP3 accounts
- Export your PST File by following the steps below.
- Back up your website and send the backup to Imaginet for upload.
- Transfer your domain.
- When the transfer is complete, simply change your email account settings to those provided by Imaginet.
- Configure your mail client to delete email from the server after a suitable amount of time.
Creating your first local backup
Click the relevant option for instructions:
Backing up your emails in Outlook
Backing up your emails in Thunderbird
Backing up your mails in Apple Mail
How to back up your emails if you only use webmail
Developing a 3-2-1 backup plan
The gold standard for data protection and disaster recovery, the 3-2-1 plan simply means that you should:
- Have 3 copies of all your important data -- the main version you work with, and 2 backups.
- Use 2 different types of storage for your backups. For example, a cloud backup, and an external drive or flash stick.
- Keep 1 backup off-site, preferably in the cloud.