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Simple Disaster Planning Activities
Creating a disaster recovery plan is a complex task; however there are a number of basic steps that you can follow to start thre process
- Prepare your systems, processes, and people for an organized response to disaster when it strikes.
- Identify critical IT systems and develop a long-range strategy.
- Select and train your disaster recovery team.
- Conduct a Business Impact Analysis.
- Determine risks to your business from natural or human-made causes.
- Get management support.
- Create appropriate plan documents.
- Test your plan.
Disaster Plan & Business Continuity Infrastructure
The key technology
elements of a Disaster Recovery Plan and Business Continuity Plan (DRP/BCP)
infrastructure are the primary data center, a remote site that duplicates the
resources in that primary location and the method used to get files (master and
transaction) between the two sites - such as high-bandwidth network
connections. The best DRP/BCP strategies follow a "redundant every-thing"
philosophy throughout the data center. Multiple mainframes and servers should
run in the production and backup data facilities. Then, if a component in the
production system encounters problems, it immediately fails over to the local
backup as a first line of defense.
Power supplies and communication links are one of the most critical components in a DRP/BCP strategy.
- more infoWhite House email system down for a day
High tech White House falls down when its email disaster plan does not work.
The White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs announced at a 1:45 p.m. press briefing that he was unable to send out the customary week-ahead memo as the White House e-mail system was "not working so well." D.C. reporters got their next e-mail from the White House around 8:30 the following morning indicating that the outage lasted most of a day.
- more infoHow to calculate the cost of downtime
One overlooked truth is that downtime costs accelerate in a non-linear fashion every hour. If a system fails for five minutes, the costs are fairly low because manual methods (paper and pencil) of making records or communicating by telephone instead of e-mails can suffice to conduct business. Over an extended period, however, the volume of work overwhelms the manual processes. Yet some businesses - such as Amazon or e-Bay - cannot run at all on manual processes. Business and financial operations increasingly deteriorate, and the rate of dollar losses grows - sometimes to the point of fatally damaging the business.
In addition, when assessing the financial impact of downtime, you need to consider factors such as potential lost revenue, reductions in worker productivity, and damaged market reputation. In some cases, downtime can even reduce shareholder confidence, which can create unnecessary and unplanned costs. Financial analysts and accountants at your company can help you come up with the factors at your company that are affected by downtime and contribute to its costs.
- more infoDisaster Planning Considerations
Many enterprises have taken a segmented approach to
Business Continuity and Availability, adding
point technology and reactive services to address disaster recovery. This
approach can be very complex, time-consuming and
costly. The task becomes much easier when a single vendor takes responsibility for architecting, implementing, testing
and supporting the solution.
There is an increase in the number of companies and organizations
requiring 24 x 365 days of IT uptime. In fact, ESG research indicates that 36%
of enterprises indicate they will incur significant revenue loss or other
adverse business impact if they have even an hour or less of downtime on their
mission-critical applications. Almost 15% indicate they cannot tolerate any
downtime.
Many Businesses Fail After a Disaster
Businesses'
reliance on IT systems and digital data has never been greater. The 2007 Best's
Underwriting Guide found that only 6% of companies that suffer catastrophic data
loss survive while 43% never reopen and 51% close within 2 years of the
disaster. Best's Underwriting Guide 2007 also found that 93% of the companies
that did not have their data backed up in the event of a disaster went out of
business. An analysis of SMBs' prioritization of disaster recovery, backup and
high availability for 2008 shows that businesses understand the risks to their
business and the value of protection. However, many organizations still think
that backup is a sufficient disaster recovery plan. However, mid-sized
enterprises are at the most risk to disaster and are more likely to rely
strictly on backup as a disaster recovery plan.
The needs and resources of mid-market
firms are unique. Midsized companies must work with limited finances
infrastructure and human resources. Robust disaster recovery used to be
affordable and manageable only by large enterprises. Mid-sized enterprises
relied more on backup than on a formal disaster recovery plan. As businesses'
reliance on IT has grown, backup has increasingly shown its weaknesses. However,
the introduction and maturation of several key technologies, such as
virtualization, have brought affordable and easily implementable Disaster Recovery and Business
Continuity to small and mid-sized companies. SMBs do not always equate
virtualization with Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity because
awareness of the many virtualization applications is just starting to
grow.
Number of Mission Critical Applications Increases
More processes are "mission-critical" as up to 60% of all applications in US-based medium-to-large enterprises are considered business-critical today (including email, collaboration, and intranet applications and data). This evolution demands that more systems, in more locations, that rely on more timely and sensitive data, be covered by Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity planning, and requires that datacenter operations teams provide tier-1 application support and data protection for a growing percentage of applications. - more infoThreats drive need for disaster and business continuity plans
With the ever changing economic climate and security threats, downtime and data loss pose intolerable risks to every business today. From CIOs to the Executive Suite, managers have seen the importance of business uptime and data protection to continued success, productivity and profitability. The Disaster Planning Template provides a road map to the most effective strategies and technologies to protect data and provide fast recovery should data be lost or corrupted due to accident or malicious action.
Planning for recovery - designing and implementing a solution to reduce the amount of recovery time needed after an interruption -is a pressing requirement for businesses of all sizes. In implementing an operational plan that ensures that both data and applications can be recovered quickly, IT managers are generally confronted with several challenges:
- How can we ensure our applications and data are recoverable without impacting business operations?
- Do we have data protection strategies available to us that meet my recovery point and recovery time objectives?
- Can we afford to implement a comprehensive plan that covers both local and remote (disaster) recovery requirements?
- Are there cost-effective alternatives that meet our requirements?
Disaster Recovery Planning International Standard Set by Janco
Disaster Recovery Business Continuity Template Now Accepted as
the International Standard
Update to the Disaster Recovery Business Continuity Template has just been released by Janco Associates..
Park City,
UT - The Disaster Recovery Business Continuity Planning template
has been sold to enterprise in over 65 countries around the globe. With
the release the latest verison of the template it is in complete
compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA, ITIL (Ver 3), ISO 17799, and PCI
DSS.
M V Janulaitis the CEO of Janco said, "Our DRP /BCP Template has
been accepted by enterprise around the globe as the standard for disaster
recovery plan and business continuity plan creation." In response to that need
Janco has updated its "Disaster Recovery / Business Continuity Template" by
increasing the content of the template as well as updating the entire document
to be compliant with Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA, ITIL (Ver. 3), ISO 17799, and PCI
DSS.
The Disaster Recovery Business Continuity Plan has been purchased for use in over 65 countries around the globe including:
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The Disaster Recovery Business Continuity Plan has been purchased for use in government, public, and private enterprises in almost all industries including:
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Outsouring Can Help in Disaster Recovery Planning
Between hackers, natural disasters, or even a pipe breaking in the office above yours, every business needs a contingency plan. It could mean the difference between riding out a problem and going out of business. For this reason, most businesses are concerned about the safety of their backups. Data loss is a significant concern for any business - and in healthcare and other industries can have huge financial consequences. Solutions typically require that you spend more money on a third party backup solution. Outsourcing is one solution that should not be overlooked. Solutions typically require that you spend more money on a third party backup solution. Outsourcing is one solution that should not be overlooked. - more infoGuidelines for Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Planning
Disaster
recovery and business continuity are important business issues that require
awareness and planning. Guidelines
that can be used in this process are:
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Look at the big picture - your business processes, systems, networks, data, and people all need to be considered when planning and implementing these processes.
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Understand your levels of tolerance for lost work, missing data, and unproductive time.
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Document and test your plans, and update them when business needs change.
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Configure your environment to minimize the likelihood of a failure escalating into a disaster.
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When evaluating technology solutions, take into account meeting your recovery objectives, kinds of disasters you're likely to face, and levels of cost, complexity, and disruption involved.
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Know the advantages and limitations of each technology, and adjust your expectations accordingly.
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Remember that backing up your data is the most reliable form of protection, without which your business is vulnerable.
DRP and Security Plans key to compliance
Preparing for a disaster requires detailed planning, preparation and testing. Knowing what IT assets need to be recovered, where to recover them and how to recover them are the essence of IT Disaster Recovery. The most difficult challenge is mapping the prioritized business requirements to the IT assets so that recovery can be staged. The recovery strategy then evolves based on the available options which support the required recovery objectives. The resulting Disaster Recovery plans contain all of the information detailing where to go, who is to do what and the information required to rebuild servers, restore applications and data as well as restart and synchronization procedures. - more infoBudget cuts impact disaster plans
IT staff cuts spurred by the economy are likely to continue throughout the remainder of the year. According to a survey of 300 IT center managers last year, half of all data centers were planning to cut 2010 budgets by an average of 15%. Respondents at 14% of those companies said the cuts would include layoffs of IT staffers.
The PayPal electronic payment system is one of many
Internet-based services that have been hit with outages. And based on news
reports, the number of such incidents appears to have been increasing in recent
months, analysts said. They cited shutdowns of the Google Apps software hosted
by Google Inc., outages at data centers run by Rackspace Hosting Inc. and a
distributed denial-of-service attack on Twitter.
Observers pointed to several possible reasons for the apparent uptick in online outages, including IT budget and personnel cutbacks, increasing corporate dependence on hosted applications -- and bad luck. Companies are not doing the maintenance we should be doing, and when you do not do maintenance, they increase the probability of catastrophic failure.
- more infoWhich Files Need to be backed up
Hard
drives often contain hundreds of thousands of files. Many of them should be
backed up every day, others only occasionally, and still others - including temp
files, the hibernation file, and your browser cache--not at all.
- Documents: You should back up your word processing files, spreadsheets, and similar documents every day. Most basic backup program perform incremental backups, in which the program copies only the files that have changed since the most recent previous backup. (Several backup programs also perform versioning; they keep several iterations of the same file on hand and enable you to choose which version to restore.)
- Recent Documents: If your backup program can handle incremental backups, you don't have to worry about recent documents as separate entities. But if you often work on these files on other people's computers, you may want to carry a copy of them on a flash drive or store a copy of them online.
- Application Data: Applications create and maintain data files such as e-mail messages, browser favorites, calendar entries, and contacts that require daily backing up. Many programs store them in a hidden folder inside your user folder (in XP, C:\Documents and Settings\your name\Application Data; in Vista, C:\Users\your name\AppData). Also, in XP, Microsoft stores Outlook and Outlook Express data in C:\Documents and Settings\your name\Local Settings\Application Data). Fortunately, any well-designed backup program intended for everyday, nonexpert users (as opposed to IT departments) knows where to look for Outlook data.
- Operating System: You can always reinstall Windows and your apps, if you have the original discs or can download the programs. But if Windows becomes unusable or your hard drive crashes, switching to a system backup (also called a disaster recovery backup) that you create a couple of times a year can get your machine up and running smoothly without much effort.
- Media: These large files require a separate backup strategy because of the amount of storage space they require..
- Heirlooms: Files that you want to keep forever need backing up and extra protection.
Cost of email downtime is high
In today's economy, the importance of e-mail takes on new meaning. Recovery time and recovery point objectives (RTOs and RPOs) are no longer general rules. The Exchange administrator's ability to meet or exceed the proverbial lines in the sand, in terms of time to recover and the age of the data recovered, can mean the difference between gainful employment and prepping for a job interview. In fact, average yearly cost of Exchange downtime for a 500-person corporation, according to data derived from the Contingency Planning Association and Strategic Research, is over $1.5 million.
Disaster Recovery Planning Template Business Continuity Plan
Sarbanes - Oxley - ISO 27000 (27001 & 27002) - HIPAA - PCI- Compliant
Disaster Recovery Planning (DRP) template can be used by any size enterprise. The template and supporting material have been updated to be Sarbanes-Oxley compliant. The Disaster Recovery Planning Documentation comes as a Word document and includes:
- Disaster Recovery Plan Template
- Business and IT Impact Analysis Questionnaire
- Work Plan
- Disaster Recovery & Business Continuity Audit Program
Included in the template is Business Impact Questionnaire as
well as a full Job Description for the Disaster Recovery Manager. The
premium edition contains 11 full job descriptions.
Communication during a recovery process often is not well planned
Disaster recovery
and emergency team members status communication and news have distinct
audiences with different needs when a crisis occurs.
- Employees/General Populace: Need access to 'basic information' such as where to go, when to return to work, and how to locate general information about the crisis situation
- Disaster Recovery Team Members: Need to account for all employees/constituents safety and assess the state of business operations; need the ability to communicate in real time, disseminate information, track recovery efforts, assign tasks and provision supplies, power, etc.; need the ability to have real time status of the situation
- Executives/Leaders: Need to know that their employees and constituents are safe; need to know the status of their business and access a high level, real-time status of the recovery efforts; need to be able to communicate with customers, investors, and people external to their business about the crisis.
Effective crisis communication requires technology to provide a unified solution for communicating information to all involved constituents and should provide a single source of accurate and up-todate information that can be accessed.
- more infoContinuous Data Protection can be used as a backup strategy for DRP amd BCP
Continuous Data Protection (CDP) is an increasingly popular disk-based backup strategy. It is replication with an Undo button. Every time a block of data changes on the system being backed up, it is transferred to the CDP system. However, unlike replication, CDP stores changes in a log, so you can undo those changes at a very granular level. In fact, you can recover the system to literally any point in time at which data was stored within the CDP system.
A near-CDP system works in similar fashion except that it has
discrete points in time to which it can recover. To put it another way, near-CDP
combines snapshots with replication. Typically, a snapshot is taken on the
system being backed up, whereupon that snapshot is replicated to another system
that holds the backup.
Why take the snapshot on the source before
replication? Because only at the source can you typically quiesce the
application writing to the storage so that the snapshot will be a meaningful
one.
Consolidation and Disaster Planning
Most organizations today are faced with conflicting goals and challenges. They have geographically distributed workforces, with headquarters, datacenters, branch offices, and mobile workers scattered widely. Everyone needs to access email, file shares, and mission critical applications, and the speed of access directly ties to employee productivity. So computing resources have been widely deployed in many locations to give the local workers the best possible service delivery. However, this approach is now seen as wasteful and expensive with extra hardware and software to buy and maintain for many locations, and often few local IT staff to support the systems. As budgets get tighter, organizations are looking for solutions to handle this burden. IT consolidation is the number one approach today, taking infrastructure out of remote offices and into the main data center as a way to cut costs and boost IT staff productivity. The trick is how to consolidate without hurting the performance for the end users.
While consolidation can certainly bring a number of benefits to
organizations, it will take more than just a Friday afternoon to
ensure that
your consolidation, disaster recovery, and business continuity projects are
truly successful. As far too many IT managers will tell you, a poorly planned
project will have your executives screaming, users threatening mutiny, and IT in
the hot seat to quickly undo all the effort that went into the project in the
first place.
- Lay out a change and risk management strategy
- Develop a plan for resiliency
- Test (and improve) branch office performance & local consolidation
- Architect a forward-looking infrastructure & support plan
- Plan a phased roll-out
Lack of disaster planning led to present crisis
Everyone came to the same conclusion: A lack of disaster planning was a key component to the extent of the damage and loss of life.Seventeen charity and civil society organizations met at the Jeddah Chamber of Commerce and Industry (JCCI) to organize their efforts after a few days of spontaneous but much appreciated mobilized work to collect and distribute donations in the affected areas. This followed a warning issued by the Governorate cautioning individuals and groups against donating haphazardly and instead directed them to give their donations through registered charity organizations, which are supposed to coordinate their distribution work with the Jeddah Governorate to ensure that the donations reach those who need them.
Discussions quickly revealed a lack of coordination among the charities and with the relevant government offices, namely the Civil Defense and the governorate. While several charities focused on the hardest hit areas, which needed every parcel of assistance it could get, other areas that were also hit hard were almost neglected. It turns out that Al-Sawaed, which has become a ghost town with only ruins, and all the Kilo areas and Mahameed were in bad shape. Poor neighborhoods in downtown Jeddah such as Ghulail and Karantina were also stricken with residents living in knee-high stinking sewage with barely the essentials to live by. Other areas hit hard include Um Alsalam, Bahra, Jamaa, Al-Musaid.
- more infoRecovery time is focus of 57% of Business Continuity Managers
In a recent survey it was found that 57 percent of IT organizations see reducing recovery time in the event of IT failure and cutting the cost of backup as the two biggest pain-points for backup and disaster recovery. The next most significant difficulties were the ability to roll back to any point in time when recovering workloads and recovery testing.
Virtualization is already in place with the majority of those surveyed, with 86 percent of those questioned having a virtual infrastructure in place within their organizations.
Other findings are:
- Tape backup is the most popular technology involved for recovery of virtual machines, with 60 percent of organizations relying on tape to protect their virtualization implementations. 53 percent of organizations are using disk-to-disk backup products, while proprietary virtualization products are used by 23 percent;
- 17 percent of organizations are only using tape backup for the backup / recovery of their virtual machines;
- The number of respondents that were able to judge their recovery point objectives (RPO) when it came to virtualized environments was much lower than those able to define their recovery time objectives (RTO) - only 45 percent of those surveyed were able to state their satisfaction level around their RPOs.













