Early last year, someone asked me to recover data off a TR3 that was written in 1999. Travan was a consumer format that was available in roughly the same time period as CD-R and their CDs were unreadable. I had a HELL of a time finding a copy of BackupExec 7.2 to handle the restore, but it turned out I had a copy on a pressed disc in my binders full of old crap. It turned out that the old drive I have still worked once I re-spooled the tape I was given. The people I was working with only had the tape, not the software or a working drive. The drive I had was a parallel port model, but I was able to load up NT4 on an ancient notebook and complete the recovery.
The lessons to take from this: Travan was a consumer format meant for home users. The recovery software was necessary to do anything with it. I also had to have a PC with the right ports and OS to handle the data. The customer DID keep their old drive, but theirs didn't work.
Hilariously, I got this little side gig because the customer approached a much larger local MSP, who passed them on to me.
Anyway, if you're doing tapes, you buy at least a couple drives, make sure they work, meaning that you can read from and recover data. You keep a copy of the backup software somewhere you can find and know to be accessible. The backup drive needs to be cleaned regularly and you need to follow whatever standard you set for frequency of backups et al. LTO 5 is a good choice right now because the drives are relatively affordable and there are gobs of cheap tapes around to be had. Make sure you have some kind of PC set aside with the right data ports to handle the drive as well, since you can't be assured that you'll have SATA / SAS / USBwhatever / Firewire / SCSI on hand when you need it.
There's a story in the news right now about how people finally found the master copies of a cartoon called Reboot that was thought to be lost for something like 15 years. Same deal. They have the tapes but they don't have anything to read them. This is why we keep a spare drive or two handy.