Rewind inks data protection partnership with workflow software giant Monday.com

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Partnership could mark turning point for Ottawa company that saw momentum slow during 2023 downturn.

Ottawa-based Rewind has struck a partnership agreement to provide its data backup and recovery service to users of workflow software giant Monday.com. 

Rewind said in a statement that it worked with Monday.com to develop an integrated backup solution to help enterprise teams securely back up and recover business data in the event of accidental deletions, cyber incidents, or data corruption, while meeting security compliance standards such as SOC 2 and ISO 27001. The company says the integrated backup solution will be available on the Monday.com marketplace in the second quarter of 2025. 

Rewind CEO Mike Potter said he had been “waiting for this day for 10 years.”

Monday.com is a cloud platform that provides users with no-code tools to create applications and project management software. The Tel Aviv, Israel-based company claims it has more than 225,000 customers, including Universal Pictures, Coca-Cola, and makeup brand Glossier.

Monday.com debuted on the NASDAQ stock exchange in 2021 at a $7.6 billion USD market capitalization, which has since grown to $15.3 billion USD. 

The partnership could mark a turning point for the data protection company, which raised more than $100-million CAD during the pandemic-fueled rise of Shopify and other e-commerce platforms, but in turn experienced a slowdown that forced the company to revise its fundraising plans and lay off more than a quarter of its staff in 2023. 

RELATED: Rewind cuts 27 percent of staff as its growth slows in parallel to Shopify

Rewind CEO Mike Potter said in a LinkedIn post that he had been “waiting for this day for 10 years,” and that when Monday.com tech partnerships lead Amir Cohen reached out, Rewind jumped at the opportunity. 

Founded in 2015 by Potter and CTO James Ciesielski, Rewind began as a backup app for the Shopify App Store, but went on to support a number of platforms, including GitHub, Jira, Confluence, Trello, Big Commerce, and QuickBooks. Rewind has a “3-2-1 backup rule,” which dictates that it makes three copies of a user’s data on two different clouds, with one of those backups held outside of the software provider.

Feature image courtesy Rewind via LinkedIn.



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