Make an iso backup of my new laptop

I just ordered a new laptop for school work. I got myself a dell xps 13 (skylake) and I would like to be able to make a backup of the system completely stock including all drivers and pre installed software before I touch it and start getting my stuff setup. I would like to make an iso backup that I just put on a usb and make it bootable if I ever need to restore back to the way it came. I am wondering what softare you guys/girls would use to do that. Although I am also open for any other suggestions if you know a better what than what I suggested.
Thanks L_T_C

You would use almost any drive copy software , and simply copy the c drive to the usb stick. I use xxclone which is really old school I'm sure there's better ones but it's the same procedure that you would use if you were just copying the drive.

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The facility to do that should be pre-installed on the device in the form of the recovery partitions. You'll need something like a 32GB USB stick to write the image to and that will be bootable to do a system recovery/restore.

Although with how annoying windows 8 and 10 are at letting you access the bios you may run into trouble there. I forgot what it's called but it's some sort of software that avoids the user coming in contact with the bios.

If I were to do it your way how does it work? I copy my c drive to my usb and how to I copy it back if I need too restore to stock?

You plug it in and instead of copying c to usb , you copy usb to c.

It's not exactly an ISO but Macrium Reflect has a free version that allows you to take an image of your disk. With a bootable recovery medium that you can use to restore the image you couldn't get much closer. Of course, being an image, all of the drivers are kept.
I've used it quite a few times. The backups (I find) are exceptionally fast and the restore has worked perfectly each time (I've intentionally wiped my laptop a few times).

The pro version adds extra functionality that I haven't had the need for like automatic backups, restoring to different hardware and few other odds n sods. An image is all that I've ever needed though.