Birdview allows professional services teams to store project, resource, and financial data in Canadian data centers. It helps government, healthcare, and other service-based organizations meet compliance requirements and maintain control over their data.
Birdview is designed to help professional services organizations meet data residency requirements while maintaining visibility and control over their data.
Project, resource, and financial data can be hosted in Canada, aligning with data residency and privacy requirements at both the federal and provincial levels.
You retain control over how your data is accessed, managed, and shared across your organization, including sensitive information such as client data and internal rates.
By keeping your data within Canada, Birdview helps reduce risks related to foreign data access and jurisdictional uncertainty.
Data residency is only one part of the equation. Birdview is powered by Microsoft Azure, a global cloud platform used by large enterprises and public sector organizations, with support for hosting data in Canada.
Birdview provides flexible access control to protect sensitive information. This allows teams to collaborate while maintaining strict control over data access.
It means your data is stored and managed within Canada, under Canadian jurisdiction.
For many organizations, where data is stored determines whether a solution can be used at all. Canadian data residency helps meet federal and provincial regulatory requirements, reduces risks associated with cross-border data access, and supports client expectations regarding confidentiality. It is especially important for government, healthcare, financial services, and professional services environments.
No. It is one part of compliance. You also need proper security, policies, and internal controls.
Yes, if the provider supports Canadian hosting and configures the environment accordingly.
To meet regulatory requirements, reduce legal risk, and ensure client data protection.
Ask your provider for data center locations, infrastructure details, and data flow documentation.
Besides asking the provider where your data is physically stored and whether it ever leaves Canada, you should also understand what cloud infrastructure is used, which laws govern access to your data, and how access is controlled and audited.
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