What would happen to your business if you experienced a catastrophic data loss? Would your business survive? The statistics are alarming, 43% of businesses never re-open after a major disaster.
A well planned data recovery strategy can deliver improved resilience with predictable costs and no unscheduled downtime. It will also allow you to sleep at night!
Below are some points to consider when compiling your Data Recovery plan.
1. Identify your data recovery needs
Data Recovery is vital for the survival of your business. Your data defines and separates your business from any other in the market. If failure should occur at any level of your infrastructure it can be felt across the business. You must ask yourself, how would your business survive a disaster? And what provisions do you have in place for your business to continue after?
2. Understand the risks
Data loss can range from the accidental deletion of files; to the failure of your entire site. Without data recovery precautions in place you are putting your organisation at risk.
IT failure is considered to be the most common threat to businesses, with electrical, hardware and software failure also posing considered risks.
The threat of fire and natural disaster, although considered less likely can have the most devastating consequences. Findings from a CBI study indicate that a high level of disruptions in 2008 and 2009 were due to extreme weather incidents such as snow, flood or high winds.
3. Assess how critical your data is
The key aspect of data recovery is understanding just how critical your data is. By compiling an assessment on the risks to your business you can then develop a tiered recovery strategy that will ensure all levels of your infrastructure can be recovered in the event of a disaster.
4. Assess how easily you can recover a file
Data backup is required by all businesses. With legal requirements tightening and data volumes growing out of control, traditional tape backup is no longer a reliable or cost effective means of meeting compliance levels. Managed Online Data Backup Services enable you to instantly recover files within seconds and deduplicate data to make the most of your storage; saving resources and reducing costs. Data is encrypted during the backup process to offer the highest level of security and is ready for recovery if needed.
5. Consider what the impact of a server failure would be
Assessment for data recovery calls for you to consider the maximum amount of downtime you can afford for any system before the impact becomes critical to business operations. You can define your data recovery policy according to how critical that system is, the chance of failure and how much you are willing to spend to minimise recovery time.
6. Assess how easily you could recover your systems
The process of re-installing an operating system, its service packs and updates, along with applications and new device drivers can take hours or even days, contributing to your overall recovery time. Prior to the lengthy process of application installation and data restoration, a compatible system is required, adding yet more downtime to that ticking clock. The reality is that system failure could result in over week of downtime till your system is back up and running.
7. What is the impact of downtime on your company?
For most large organisations, to be without a particular system, such as email for any length of time could result in the loss of business. Should the system running your website fail, and customers attempt to visit an inactive site, the chances are they will not return. The longer the site is down, the more business you could potentially lose. It is vital that you can recover your systems as quickly as possible, reducing downtime and limiting loss of business. Essentially, any length of downtime can be harmful to your business, but extended downtime could spell out the end.
8. Assess what method of system recovery is best suited to your critical system
Assessing the critical levels of your specific data and systems, allows you to set a data recovery policy that works best for you depending on the Recovery Point Objective (RPI) of your data.
Bare metal recovery essentially backs up the entire system, enabling you to recover the operating system, application software and data in a single pass, reducing your recovery time by hours. This solution enables you to recover to either similar or dissimilar hardware. Online disk backup allows you to increase the frequency of your backup for more dynamic and rapidly changing data. This Real-time protection solution provides this and, with tiered recovery architecture, you have the flexibility of backing up more frequently on critical systems and less frequently on non-critical systems. This saves you money as it cost-effectively balances your data protection needs.
Another method is continuous data protection (CDP), which improves your time to recover a complete system. With CDP, you backup very rapidly across a LAN to your local vault onsite while simultaneously backing up over the wire to a vault in offsite, providing protection from on-site and natural disasters.
9. Consider how your network would survive a disaster
Putting a resilient data recovery policy in place insures your data against failure, but what about your network? Your network infrastructure is vital to continuous running of your organisation. A disaster on site will take out your network as well as your data.
Hosting your network with a service provider offers you a fully managed solution for network recovery. Your network will be accessible even in site failure, ensuring that your business continues as normal.
10. Consider how your telephony would survive a disaster
Managed hosting is the ultimate business continuity solution. Not only can you host your data, systems and network safely offsite in the service providers 'cloud'; you can also protect your telephony systems in the same way. Service providers such as InTechnology offer a portfolio of hosted cloud services to protect your entire infrastructure.
Hosting your IT infrastructure in the cloud covers every aspect for business continuity as well as allowing you access to extra computing resources when you need them. For a truly resilient business continuity solution that is flexible with your business needs, managed hosting is the answer.
Source
Monday, September 28, 2009
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Disaster recovery news briefs: Verizon expands disaster recovery services
Verizon expands disaster recovery and business continuity services
Verizon Business is expanding its portfolio of disaster recovery/business continuity professional services. The new consulting services -- immediately available in the U.S., as well as countries in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region -- focus on business applications, regulatory compliance, training and awareness, and testing. The new services include: application infrastructure deployment review; business continuity compliance; business continuity/disaster recovery testing support; and business continuity/disaster recovery training.
Verizon Business is offering its business continuity professional services on an annual, quarterly or monthly subscription basis. The new professional services capabilities are part of Verizon Business' portfolio of business continuity consulting services that include business impact and risk analyses, network assessments, gap analyses and recovery strategies, as well as plan development, implementation and lifecycle management services.
The Business Continuity Institute expands number of credential exam centers
The Business Continuity Institute (BCI) announced an agreement with testing services firm Professional Examination Service (PES) and its delivery partner Prometric that expands the number of exam locations for BCI's professional certificates to more than 400 in more than 75 countries. Through Prometric's worldwide computer-based test delivery network, BCI now has professional certificate exam centers in Africa, China, Europe, India, Japan, Latin America, Middle East, Asia-Pacific, Canada and the U.S. Exams are offered on an ongoing basis in the morning and afternoon with limited evening and weekend sessions.
Cisco Systems announces new data center disaster recovery capabilities
Cisco announced its Cisco MDS 9000 I/O Accelerator, a SAN-based intelligent fabric application that enables cost-effective data backup and disaster recovery. The IOA service can be extended to either disk or tape, over any transport protocol (FC or FCIP), regardless of the device location (directly attached, WAN, or MAN).
CoSentry chooses with EMC Avamar for remote recovery
EMC Corp. announced that CoSentry, a one-source provider of business continuity and managed technical services, is using the EMC Avamar deduplicated backup software to enhance its remote recovery services. CoSentry has data centers in Kansas City, Miss., Omaha, Neb. and Sioux Falls, and was looking to expand its disaster recovery services for customers.
Hitachi Data Systems qualifies Riverbed disaster recovery appliances
Riverbed Technology announced that Riverbed Steelhead appliances are qualified by Hitachi Data Systems for use with both Hitachi TrueCopy Remote Replication and Hitachi Universal Replicator products. Hitachi Data Systems customers can now deploy Riverbed WAN optimization solutions.
InMage Systems presents disaster recovery for Linux environments at OpenSource World Conference and Expo
InMage Systems will exhibit its flagship InMage Scout software at OpenSource World Conference and Expo. InMage Scout is an application and data recovery platform that supports remote disaster recovery, local backup elimination, and application failover/failback at both remote and local sites. Built around block-based replication, InMage Scout also uses a WAN optimization technologies to minimize the amount of data that needs to be sent across WANs to enable recovery operations.
Source
Verizon Business is expanding its portfolio of disaster recovery/business continuity professional services. The new consulting services -- immediately available in the U.S., as well as countries in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region -- focus on business applications, regulatory compliance, training and awareness, and testing. The new services include: application infrastructure deployment review; business continuity compliance; business continuity/disaster recovery testing support; and business continuity/disaster recovery training.
Verizon Business is offering its business continuity professional services on an annual, quarterly or monthly subscription basis. The new professional services capabilities are part of Verizon Business' portfolio of business continuity consulting services that include business impact and risk analyses, network assessments, gap analyses and recovery strategies, as well as plan development, implementation and lifecycle management services.
The Business Continuity Institute expands number of credential exam centers
The Business Continuity Institute (BCI) announced an agreement with testing services firm Professional Examination Service (PES) and its delivery partner Prometric that expands the number of exam locations for BCI's professional certificates to more than 400 in more than 75 countries. Through Prometric's worldwide computer-based test delivery network, BCI now has professional certificate exam centers in Africa, China, Europe, India, Japan, Latin America, Middle East, Asia-Pacific, Canada and the U.S. Exams are offered on an ongoing basis in the morning and afternoon with limited evening and weekend sessions.
Cisco Systems announces new data center disaster recovery capabilities
Cisco announced its Cisco MDS 9000 I/O Accelerator, a SAN-based intelligent fabric application that enables cost-effective data backup and disaster recovery. The IOA service can be extended to either disk or tape, over any transport protocol (FC or FCIP), regardless of the device location (directly attached, WAN, or MAN).
CoSentry chooses with EMC Avamar for remote recovery
EMC Corp. announced that CoSentry, a one-source provider of business continuity and managed technical services, is using the EMC Avamar deduplicated backup software to enhance its remote recovery services. CoSentry has data centers in Kansas City, Miss., Omaha, Neb. and Sioux Falls, and was looking to expand its disaster recovery services for customers.
Hitachi Data Systems qualifies Riverbed disaster recovery appliances
Riverbed Technology announced that Riverbed Steelhead appliances are qualified by Hitachi Data Systems for use with both Hitachi TrueCopy Remote Replication and Hitachi Universal Replicator products. Hitachi Data Systems customers can now deploy Riverbed WAN optimization solutions.
InMage Systems presents disaster recovery for Linux environments at OpenSource World Conference and Expo
InMage Systems will exhibit its flagship InMage Scout software at OpenSource World Conference and Expo. InMage Scout is an application and data recovery platform that supports remote disaster recovery, local backup elimination, and application failover/failback at both remote and local sites. Built around block-based replication, InMage Scout also uses a WAN optimization technologies to minimize the amount of data that needs to be sent across WANs to enable recovery operations.
Source
Friday, August 28, 2009
Disaster Recovery And How To Avoid It
Data recovery services make a good living getting data off apparently useless hard disks, CDs, and tape. It's good to know the service is available -- but it's even better never to need it.
According to Dyan Parker, chief performance officer at WeRecoverData.com, there are lots of ways a business can ruin its storage media. She's been asked to recover information from a phone that's been left in the glove compartment all day, from CDs a company stored improperly (vertically rather than flat), and from a laptop someone dropped in a lake.
And, she says her company can handle the job. They have their own R&D lab and proprietary utilities for data recovery. When the utilities don't work, they send the storage medium to the R&D lab to see if they can reverse-engineer the device. WeRecoverData sees the disks that other data recovery companies have given up on, she says, and boasts that "if we can't recover your data, nobody can."
But that kind of expertise doesn't come cheap. The company will provide a report at no charge on what needs to be done, but actually doing it is a different matter. Before the diagnosis, their standard quote is $400 to $2,400 for a single drive. But for business servers, RAID systems, and other higher-capacity or more complex storage devices, she says, "you can just start adding zeroes after those figures."
So how can you avoid having your business become one of Ms. Parker's customers? We asked, and her top pieces of advice are:
1. If you get the feeling there's something wrong with your storage device, shut it off immediately and take it to an expert to have examined. If you try to keep using it, you could end up overwriting the data and making it harder or impossible to recover.
2. Pay attention to dialog boxes and read them carefully. Don't simply say "yes" because you're in a hurry -- it might be asking if you really want to reformat your drive.
3. Remember that it's a mechanical device (at least until all storage is solid state) and relies on the operation of physical objects. Treat it with care.
4. Instruct your employees in proper handling of the equipment. It's human nature for people not to treat a work machine the same way they would if they'd bought it themselves.
5. Back up your backup systems. And this doesn't mean just have a second backup device -- assign someone to make sure it's getting done. Parker's seen cases where businesses have set up an automatic backup system and trusted it, only to find out later the backups weren't happening as they should.
And, perhaps most obviously: don't drop your computer in the lake.
Source
According to Dyan Parker, chief performance officer at WeRecoverData.com, there are lots of ways a business can ruin its storage media. She's been asked to recover information from a phone that's been left in the glove compartment all day, from CDs a company stored improperly (vertically rather than flat), and from a laptop someone dropped in a lake.
And, she says her company can handle the job. They have their own R&D lab and proprietary utilities for data recovery. When the utilities don't work, they send the storage medium to the R&D lab to see if they can reverse-engineer the device. WeRecoverData sees the disks that other data recovery companies have given up on, she says, and boasts that "if we can't recover your data, nobody can."
But that kind of expertise doesn't come cheap. The company will provide a report at no charge on what needs to be done, but actually doing it is a different matter. Before the diagnosis, their standard quote is $400 to $2,400 for a single drive. But for business servers, RAID systems, and other higher-capacity or more complex storage devices, she says, "you can just start adding zeroes after those figures."
So how can you avoid having your business become one of Ms. Parker's customers? We asked, and her top pieces of advice are:
1. If you get the feeling there's something wrong with your storage device, shut it off immediately and take it to an expert to have examined. If you try to keep using it, you could end up overwriting the data and making it harder or impossible to recover.
2. Pay attention to dialog boxes and read them carefully. Don't simply say "yes" because you're in a hurry -- it might be asking if you really want to reformat your drive.
3. Remember that it's a mechanical device (at least until all storage is solid state) and relies on the operation of physical objects. Treat it with care.
4. Instruct your employees in proper handling of the equipment. It's human nature for people not to treat a work machine the same way they would if they'd bought it themselves.
5. Back up your backup systems. And this doesn't mean just have a second backup device -- assign someone to make sure it's getting done. Parker's seen cases where businesses have set up an automatic backup system and trusted it, only to find out later the backups weren't happening as they should.
And, perhaps most obviously: don't drop your computer in the lake.
Source
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