A core task for the smooth running of Jenkins is the scheduled backing up of its home directory. This is not necessarily all the artifacts, but is at least its configuration and the history of testing, which plugins will need to make reports.
Backups are not interesting unless you can also restore. There is a wide range of stories on this subject. My favorite (and I won't name the well-known company involved) is that, sometime in the early 70's, a company bought a very expensive piece of software and a tape backup facility to back up all the marketing results being harvested through their mainframes. However, not everything was automated. Every night, a tape needed to be moved into a specific slot. A poorly paid worker was allocated the task. For a year, the worker would professionally fulfill the task. One day, a failure occurred and...