News
Rubrik Launches Google Workspace Data Protection Offering for Enterprise Cyber Resilience
Rubrik on Thursday announced the launch of Rubrik Data Protection for Google Workspace, a product the company said is designed to help enterprise customers protect data and restore operations across Google Workspace environments.
The announcement targets organizations using Google Drive and Gmail and presents the offering as part of a broader cyber-resilience strategy spanning data, identity and AI.
The company said the new offering is aimed at enterprises that rely on Google Workspace for day-to-day operations and cannot afford disruptions that lock users out of critical collaboration tools or data. In the March 19 announcement, Rubrik said more than 11 million enterprises using Google Drive and Gmail can use its features to pursue what it called end-to-end cyber resilience.
Rubrik framed the release around operational recovery rather than long-term retention alone. The company said Google Workspace "holds mission-critical data for millions in organizations worldwide" and that customers need ways to reduce the risk of data loss, business loss and suspended operations. The release also said the product is intended to accelerate recovery "to minutes, from days," while keeping original data and systems intact.
Anneka Gupta, chief product officer at Rubrik, said in the release that "Organizations can't protect data in isolation. Modern resilience requires us to see the entire estate at once." Gupta added that Rubrik is "built on three pillars of resilience -- data, identity, and AI -- because an attack or error in one is a direct threat to the entire ecosystem."
Rubrik listed four feature areas for the Google Workspace product. The first is logical air-gap protection, which the company described as immutable, air-gapped backups for Gmail and Google Drive. The second is high-fidelity, rapid recovery, which the company contrasted with manual restores that remove permissions and other context from recovered content. The third is automated, policy-driven service-level agreements, which the company said can help organizations meet strict recovery point objective and recovery time objective requirements. The fourth is continuity, which Rubrik said is supported through a "point-and-click" experience intended to shorten recovery work.
Rubrik said the new offering brings immutable, air-gapped backups to Gmail and Google Drive and is meant to help organizations restore business operations faster after an incident.
That positioning matters because Google Workspace has become a primary system for communication and file storage in many enterprises. Rubrik ties the new product to operational continuity, describing the release as a way to help organizations continue functioning even after attacks or errors affect cloud productivity systems.
The company also used the announcement to reinforce a broader platform message. The company described the Google Workspace launch as part of "one of the first unified cyber resilience platforms for Google Workspace" and said the offering provides comprehensive protection across "data, identity, and AI."
Gupta said Rubrik's mission with Google Cloud is to provide "a unified platform that offers trust and complete cyber resilience." That language presents the announcement as more than a point product for file recovery. Instead, Rubrik is describing Google Workspace protection as one piece of a larger architecture for resilience across enterprise environments that now include AI-driven workflows and cloud identity dependencies.
Rubrik said its "point-and-click" experience can cut recovery times from days of manual reconstruction to minutes. The company also said the product is designed to preserve original data and systems, a statement that positions the offering against recovery approaches that require more destructive or time-consuming manual work.
The company tied the announcement to its upcoming presence at Google Cloud Next 2026, scheduled for April 22-24 in Las Vegas.
About the Author
David Ramel is an editor and writer at Converge 360.