Have you analyzed your
facility, equipment, systems, processes, and procedures, of your organization
in order to evaluate the ability of your business to continue operations
in case of a disaster? A thorough evaluation of the strengths and weaknesses
of your company's 'preparedness' can give you a clear idea of the possible
impact in lost opportunity and real dollars that an interruption or
outage may cause. An experienced consulting services staff can help
you assess risk, identify risk prevention alternatives, and determine
how best to protect your business. Look for a business continuance
partner who can provide the information necessary to enable you to
understand the value of your application data as well as the exposure
to and costs associated with loss of that data. Where do you start
to develop a business continuance plan and what are the methods for
determining your 'prepardness'?
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Talk to your users
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Identify threats, vulnerabilities, and areas of
business impact
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Review business processes and establish interdependencies
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Determine time-sensitive business processes, functions,
departments, and work areas
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Determine system, data, and telecommunications
supporting the time-sensitive processes, functions, and departments
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Determine regulatory and legal considerations
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Determine recovery time objectives
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Define requirements for all departments
A business continuance evaluation should review various
contingency plans and provide recommendations that will help develop
processes consistent with industry standard disaster recovery methodologies.
Put a recovery plan in place that addresses all critical business functions,
a detailed blueprint that defines the resourses, processes, and date
required for managing recovery in the event of a business interruption. |
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Once you know which systems need to be protected, then
you need to decide how to protect it. Typically disaster recovery plans
include daily offiste backups that are picked up from your site and
transported to a secure facility on a daily basis. this is known as
physical offsite vaulting and is a sluggish process that can increase
the gap of lost date when it is needed most-during a disaster. This
method remains popular because it is inexpensive. Electronic vaulting
may prove more expensive but it provides a lower recovery point and
recovery time, which improves businesses recovery during a disaster.
Electronic vaulting addresses the increasingly complex disaster recovery
requirements of an organization's core systems. By electronically transmitting
and creating backup tapes at a secure facility, these organizations
move business critical date offsite faster and more frequently than
traditional tape date backup processes permit, enabling them to:
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Extend data protection
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Enable process improvements
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Improve data currency, integrity, security
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Reduce date recovery time
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Minimize data loss
We have seen the real life examples of companies who
struggle to recover from missed opportunities, lost revenue and customer
disappointment. An electronic vaulting system can insulate valuable
corporate information assets in an offline, offsite and out of reach
enviroment, while also allowing for the period of time to achieve recovered
data to be significantly smaller. In addition, the optimum electronic
vaulting service should:
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Enable tape handling process improvements
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Reduce onsite labor costs
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Shorten recovery window
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Lower cost of downtime
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Improve data security and integrity
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Improve tape recall time
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Improve disaster recovery testing process
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Scale with storage growth
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The
Electronic Vaulting Method: Step by Step
Electronic vaulting is the process of electronically
transmitting and creating backup tapes directly at an offsite facility,
elminating the need to transport backup tapes via truck. For many organizations,
this hybrid solution offers the most value by combining physical offsite
vaulting with the electronic journaling of transactions or changes
that occur between regular backups. The time between the last safe
backup and the point of failure is called the recovery point. with
daily offsite backups in the traditional method, the worst-case recovery
point could be between 24 and 48 hours. In today's competitive ecomony,
such an extended recovery point can destroy a business.
Electronic vaulting reduces an organization's recovery
point, streamlines the backup and recovery process, and reduces the
duration of an outage as well as the onsite workload. In addition,
a company can significantly reduce bandwidth costs by vaulting to a
local secure facility, rather then to its distant hot site.
For example, consider a financial services company that
has a 36-hour recovery point exposure with traditional physical tape
transfer to offsite storage. if they implement electronic journaling
of their log tapes, they could reduce the recovery point exposure to
one hour. While the service cost is $30,000 per month, the 35-hour
exposure loss costs $14 million. The electronic justification is an
inexpensive insurance premium. With disaster avoidance measures like
disk mirroring or data replication that provide real-time capture,
an organization gets high availability of data. However, some disasters,
like those caused by hackers or viruses, can destroy the mirrored or
replicated copy. True disaster recovery protection means that backups
are offsite and out of reach, not just offline. For optimum data protection,
an organization can combine disk mirroring, electronic vaulting, and
electronic journaling. |
Decreasing
Recovery Time
In contrast, recovery time includes the time elapsed
from the when the disaster occurred to resumption of normal business
activities. Typically recovery time is 72 hours. While electronic vaulting
addresses an organization's recovery point objective, it can easily
combine this service with other methods to improve recovery time as
well. For example, to decrease recovery time, an organization could:
- Store data at or near your hot site for fast physical transfer
- Store operating systems on hot site spinning disks
- Send backup tapes to its hot site daily
- Link electronically from the tape vaulting facility bunker to the
hot site to expedite data transfer
Managed electronic vaulting will strengthen your
disaster recovery plan easily and economically. Outsourcing data
protection can streamline operations, reduce labor costs, and increase
performance of data backup and restore process, minimizing the
negative impact on business.
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