I can’t stress enough the importance of having a valid backup strategy for your work, one that really works and is part of your workflow, and if you find this just a secondary matter I strongly advise you to review your perspective on this (www.thephoblographer.com/2012/04/2… photographylife.com/photograp…). A few years ago I nearly lost my photos on a stupid mistake, it wasn’t a small disaster or even a faulty drive, only a simple “delete partition” command executed on the wrong place; you can say it was my enlightenment moment of backups. Because this isn’t a very technical post I’ll sum up how mine currently works in a couple of lines:My RAW files are automatically synced to multiple external drives.My finished photos (full-size JPEGs) are automatically synced to the cloud. Syncing all my RAW files to the cloud could become time consuming and become more expensive.Right now one of my main backup external drives has died (side note: checking the state of your data is also part of a good backup workflow) and times like these are great to reevaluate the strategy. I can either replace it and keep things as they are, or think in different a different approach like a Network Drive or a higher reliance of cloud backups.Without going too much in detail, what’s your thoughts on this? What works for you?