Data going rogue? No
chance.
chance.
By Matthew Johnston, Area
Vice President, ASEAN & Korea, Commvault
Vice President, ASEAN & Korea, Commvault
The brand new year
brings exciting opportunities and unseen challenges. While wretched hives of
hackers and cyber criminals are expected to continue their villainous acts,
I.T. Jedi have the knowledge, skills and means to fight back. Businesses who
want to protect and secure their data assets must know their enemies well,
assess the risks, engage the forces of backup and recovery, and prepare to win.
A powerful ally they must have on their side is a well-designed disaster
recovery (DR) plan, after all there are no fool proof plans, there are only
well planned ones.
brings exciting opportunities and unseen challenges. While wretched hives of
hackers and cyber criminals are expected to continue their villainous acts,
I.T. Jedi have the knowledge, skills and means to fight back. Businesses who
want to protect and secure their data assets must know their enemies well,
assess the risks, engage the forces of backup and recovery, and prepare to win.
A powerful ally they must have on their side is a well-designed disaster
recovery (DR) plan, after all there are no fool proof plans, there are only
well planned ones.
Given that 63 percent
of businesses in Asia – the highest percentage globally – are routinely
generating value and insights from data[1], any downtime
translates into lost revenue, lowered employee productivity and damage to the
corporate brand. And despite the acknowledgement that the value of a company’s
data is its core asset, more than 60 percent of companies do not have a fully
documented DR plan[2]. It is therefore
vital that companies can keep their businesses running in the face of disaster,
both man-made and natural.
of businesses in Asia – the highest percentage globally – are routinely
generating value and insights from data[1], any downtime
translates into lost revenue, lowered employee productivity and damage to the
corporate brand. And despite the acknowledgement that the value of a company’s
data is its core asset, more than 60 percent of companies do not have a fully
documented DR plan[2]. It is therefore
vital that companies can keep their businesses running in the face of disaster,
both man-made and natural.
I’m a Star Wars fan
and the recent cinema visits made me think about jotting down a couple pointers
on DR planning:
and the recent cinema visits made me think about jotting down a couple pointers
on DR planning:
Form an alliance of DR
heroes
heroes
In times of conflict,
a group of ordinary people can band together to achieve extraordinary feats,
and create something greater than themselves in the process. Unless your
company adopts the same approach, you’re basically gambling with your corporate
assets every day. Disaster recovery planning requires deep collaboration
between many stakeholders, extending all the way from the leadership, to
lines-of-business managers, down to I.T. personnel. No single person will ever
have the power to achieve this.
a group of ordinary people can band together to achieve extraordinary feats,
and create something greater than themselves in the process. Unless your
company adopts the same approach, you’re basically gambling with your corporate
assets every day. Disaster recovery planning requires deep collaboration
between many stakeholders, extending all the way from the leadership, to
lines-of-business managers, down to I.T. personnel. No single person will ever
have the power to achieve this.
To prepare for risk,
you must do, or do not. There is no try.
you must do, or do not. There is no try.
Before any action can
be taken, disaster recovery planning should always begin with a risk analysis.
First, understand the potential costs and lost revenue resulting from
disruptions to the business. Next, assign a likelihood of occurrence to the
risks which have the biggest impact. Finally, define your plan (and cost
required) to mitigate these risks.
be taken, disaster recovery planning should always begin with a risk analysis.
First, understand the potential costs and lost revenue resulting from
disruptions to the business. Next, assign a likelihood of occurrence to the
risks which have the biggest impact. Finally, define your plan (and cost
required) to mitigate these risks.
The ability to
centralize is insignificant next to the power of the Cloud
centralize is insignificant next to the power of the Cloud
Emperor Palpatine may
not have been aware of it, but when he built the powerful Death Star, he created
a single point of failure. With many of his key personnel, information and
resources located in one battle station, the Empire practically collapsed when
the Death Star was blown away (twice).
not have been aware of it, but when he built the powerful Death Star, he created
a single point of failure. With many of his key personnel, information and
resources located in one battle station, the Empire practically collapsed when
the Death Star was blown away (twice).
In the same way, CIOs
need to ensure that their company’s vital information resources are not
concentrated in one or two physical locations. They can take advantage of
public cloud services that provide an optimal balance of cost and flexibility,
while allowing them to extend DR to a broader array of tested systems,
applications and data, thereby making their operations more robust. Security in
the cloud has also reached enterprise-ready levels with many global companies
entrusting their data to established providers; all that is required is to
evaluate potential cloud partners with the same rigor and discipline as you
would any third-party service provider.
need to ensure that their company’s vital information resources are not
concentrated in one or two physical locations. They can take advantage of
public cloud services that provide an optimal balance of cost and flexibility,
while allowing them to extend DR to a broader array of tested systems,
applications and data, thereby making their operations more robust. Security in
the cloud has also reached enterprise-ready levels with many global companies
entrusting their data to established providers; all that is required is to
evaluate potential cloud partners with the same rigor and discipline as you
would any third-party service provider.
When it comes to DR,
there’s no such thing as luck.
there’s no such thing as luck.
Despite disaster
recovery planning being critical to business continuity, it rarely appears high
on the list of business or budgetary priorities, unless mandated by regulators
or government. Instead, many companies prefer to rely on blind hope; without
going through the rigor and training required to be fully proficient in the
ways of the Force.
recovery planning being critical to business continuity, it rarely appears high
on the list of business or budgetary priorities, unless mandated by regulators
or government. Instead, many companies prefer to rely on blind hope; without
going through the rigor and training required to be fully proficient in the
ways of the Force.
Major disruptions,
disaster or even IT outages continue to strike organizations as they experience
at least an hour of data loss, or even more alarmingly, causing a data centre
loss for up to five hours. With losses ranging from US$50,000 to over US$5
million, it is a business imperative to implement a disaster recovery plan to
protect your data as you would your assets.
disaster or even IT outages continue to strike organizations as they experience
at least an hour of data loss, or even more alarmingly, causing a data centre
loss for up to five hours. With losses ranging from US$50,000 to over US$5
million, it is a business imperative to implement a disaster recovery plan to
protect your data as you would your assets.
Always keep in mind,
disasters do happen and not always to the other guy. Best practice
organizations have robust DR capabilities that are vigorously tested. If you
want to rise from being an information Padawan to becoming a fully-realized
Master, disaster recovery and business continuity planning must become part of
the fabric of running your business.
disasters do happen and not always to the other guy. Best practice
organizations have robust DR capabilities that are vigorously tested. If you
want to rise from being an information Padawan to becoming a fully-realized
Master, disaster recovery and business continuity planning must become part of
the fabric of running your business.
May your data be with
you. Always.
you. Always.
[1] Forbes (2016), How many companies are really making money from their data?
[2] Data Recovery Preparedness Benchmark (2014), The state of global disaster recovery Prepared
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