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Tools for Disaster Recovery planing
02/02/2012When it comes to disaster recovery, rapidly growing data volumes, distributed computing models, and new technologies all combine to present an ever-changing playing field. Safe recovery distances can also mean painfully slow replication and backup across the WAN in addition to the costs to accomplish this.
Janco's "Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Template" leads the way to implementation of the latest disaster recovery technologies and cost savings strategies. Enterprise of all sizes can build a functional disaster recovery plan with this tool and make your own disaster recovery efforts more efficient.
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Business Continuity Plan is more than just paper
01/20/2012The Business Continuity Planning is about more than the IT components. Though the CEO and executive staff must define what business processes need protection and the appropriate response.
IT has several innate characteristics that make them well suited to disaster planning and implementation.
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- Project planning: IT is accustomed to implementing new technology in a controlled fashion, giving IT staff experience in understanding and planning for the impact of change for maximum success.
- People/Process/technology relationship understanding: Two areas in which having an understanding of this relationship are key to success. The implementation of new technology often changes process. Changes in process change the ways people interact with information systems. From advanced computers and applications to systems that allow physical building access, IT understands the people/process/technology relationship better than any other team in the company. In addition, IT also has a deep understanding of how supporting systems are critical to the delivery of, and access to primary information systems. From Active Directory and DHCP to routers and firewalls, IT understands the key systems and the order in which they must be restored to deliver a complete service. This understanding facilitates business continuity and restoration.
- Experienced in disaster management: In complex IT environments, something is usually broken or has a problem. IT has the experience to quickly identify the problem, understand the impact and respond appropriately to the issue. This experience is vital in the high stress and dynamic environment of managing a disaster event.
Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity a critical part of enterprise operations
01/08/2012Disaster recovery is becoming an increasingly important aspect of enterprise computing. As devices, systems, and networks become ever more complex, there are simply more things that can go wrong. As a consequence, recovery plans have also become more complex. According to Janco Associates (the author of the Disaster Recovery Business Continuity Template). For example, fifteen or twenty years ago if there was a threat to systems from a fire, a disaster recovery plan might consist of powering down the mainframe and other computers before the sprinkler system came on, disassembling components, and subsequently drying circuit boards in the parking lot with a hair dryer. Current enterprise systems tend to be too large and complicated for such simple and hands-on approaches, however, and interruption of service or loss of data can have serious financial impact, whether directly or through loss of customer confidence.
Appropriate plans vary from one enterprise to another, depending on variables such as the type of business, the processes involved, and the level of security needed. Disaster recovery planning may be developed within an organization or purchased as a software application or a service. It is not unusual for an enterprise to spend 25% of its information technology budget on disaster recovery.
Nevertheless, the consensus within the DR industry is that most enterprises are still ill-prepared for a disaster. According to the Janco Associates Disaster Recover Business Continuity web site, Despite the number of very public disasters since 9/11, still only about 50 percent of companies report having a disaster recovery plan. Of those that do, nearly half have never tested their plan, which is tantamount to not having one at all.
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eCommerace mandates business continuity management
12/14/2011There's little doubt that business continuity management (BCM) must be front and center for today's payment card issuers : the potential cost implications of an unmanaged catastrophic incident within the supply chain for payment card issuers can run into millions of Euros and cause wide-ranging reputational issues that may impact customer growth.
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Lost data is critical to users
11/10/2011
The general lack of preparedness for disasters and business interuptions is surprising in light of the fact that 40% of users feel like they would never be able to recover, recreate or repurchase all of their documents and files if their personal computer crashed. Its even more surprising considering the insights that the study uncovered regarding the significant value many assign to their digital content, including:
- It is More Valuable Than Vacation Time
- It is Even More Precious Than My Wedding Ring
- I would Pay Dearly to Get My Data Back
- I would Sacrifice Something I Love to Save My Data
Users Place Too Much Trust in Their Hard Drives
Users are surprisingly trusting of their computer hard drives, particularly taking into account that over half have lost all of their personal files in a computer crash at some point. According to study, 82% of users keep electronic files only and the majority of these files are nowhere else but on their computer hard drive. The most popular files people store digitally are photos (55%), music (46%), resumes (42%), addresses (28%), phone numbers (27%), and financial documents (22%). Notably, the average user surveyed has more than $400 of digital music and movies on their computers and that, for one in four, the music and movies are worth more than the computer itself.
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Disaster Recovery budgets remain stable
11/05/2011A report into business continuity and disaster recovery budgets finds:
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- According to a IT
budget survey, 32 percent of enterprises had planned to increase spending on business continuity and disaster recovery by at least 5 percent in 2011. The reality is that budgets have stayed constant rather than increased as anticipated.
- Business continuity and disaster recovery budgets in 2011 have been an average of six percent of IT operating and capital budgets.
- The likely culprit in stalled business continuity and disaster recovery spending is the continuing economic uncertainty. Even in the best of economic times, it's difficult to build the business case for an initiative such as business continuity that's primarily about cost avoidance rather than return on investment. In tough economic times, it's almost impossible.
Social media a disaster planning tools
10/27/2011
Government agencies are turning to social media technology to manage disasters and improve public safety.
A growing number of agencies are tapping into Facebook and Twitter to monitor events and provide near real-time notifications. And some are now taking social media a step further by communicating internally or sharing information and comments across offices or agencies.
A September Congressional Research Service report, Social Media and Disasters: Current Uses, Future Options, and Policy Considerations, noted that social media already plays an important role in disasters, but the use of the technology for emergency management is growing.
In Fort Worth and Tarrant County in Texas, for instance, a joint emergency operations center has switched on social media tools that improve communication across dozens of agencies and departments throughout the state. Police, firefighters, healthcare providers and others use push-to-talk radio, cellular telephony, and text messaging (including text documents and file sharing) to interact with an IP telephony infrastructure located in a response center. This allows teams to coordinate immediate responses, regardless of the underlying communications technology.
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How does ISO 27031 impact your disaster plan?
10/18/2011ISO 27031:2011, the information and communications technology (ICT) continuity management standard developed originally by the British Standards Institution (BSI), was accepted as an ISO standard in 2011. It represents a management systems-based implementation of an IT disaster recovery program. It has six key principles:
- Protecting the ICT environment from incidents, failures and disruptions;
- Detecting incidents at the earliest possible time;
- Reacting to incidents as efficiently as possible;
- Recovering by identifying and implementing appropriate recovery strategies;
- Operating in disaster recovery mode.
- Returning to normal operations.
While ISO 27031 is intended for use in the larger context of a business continuity program, organizations have successfully implemented this standard and then later grew into business continuity.
Structured as a management systems-based standard, ISO 27031 has two main components: the management system and the process. The management system is intended to ensure that an organization has a documented process to execute ICT continuity management. It utilizes the plan-do-check-act (PDCA) cycle consistent with ISO and other management system based standards. The process details the necessary components to provide the recovery capability. While the management system described in ISO 27031 can be established solely for IT disaster recovery, there are elements of the process that assume the existence of an overall business continuity program. As you can see below, ICT requirements are established by business continuity requirements typically determined during a business impact analysis.
The process of developing, maintaining, and improving an ICT capability are defined as five high level components:
- Understanding the ICT requirements for business continuity - with the purpose of determining the ICT continuity services needed to support the business continuity requirements. The process requires understanding the components of critical services in production, their current continuity capability and the gap between current capabilities and business continuity requirements. The analysis should also focus on actions that can be taken to improve the resiliency of the production environment;
- Determining ICT continuity strategies - with the purpose of developing both an overall ICT continuity management strategy and strategies for each critical ICT service that closes gaps identified during the previous phase;
- Developing and implementing ICT strategies - with the purpose of implementing the chosen strategies, including establishing the necessary organizational structure, plans and procedures;
- Exercising and testing - with the purpose of ensuring that the strategies and plans work as intended;
- Maintenance, review and improvement - with the purpose of ensuring that ICT continuity strategy remains current and appropriate.
For those familiar with BS 25999-2:2007, the business continuity management standard, the structure above is consistent with sections four through six of that standard.
Given the similarities to BS 25999, ISO 27031 is the logical choice for implementing a disaster recovery capability in organizations that either utilize BS 25999 for business continuity or have other management systems-based programs. It also provides solid guidance for organizations that have no business continuity or other structure in place to serve as a basis for disaster recovery development. Establishing a management system as part of an ISO 27031 implementation will provide the necessary governance and provide a platform for the development of a more comprehensive business continuity program.
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Disaster recovery done in place should use outside experts
10/16/2011Many organizations simply do not have the luxury of being able to move to an alternative recovery site following a physical disruption. In these cases disaster recovery plans should include the support of a disaster recovery company that will aid the internal recovery and incident team to mitigate against secondary damage, administer triage to the affected areas and expedite the correct equipment, methods and manpower to restore their facility as quickly as possible to a suitable working environment, so that service can be resumed.
Such disaster recovery responders will be on 24/7 standby to attend the client site. The responder will have conducted a survey of the site in advance of an incident, noting critical information so that any recovery and restoration objectives will be expedited without delay.
Speed of response is vital: in order to reduce the level of disruption and physical secondary damage; and to limit the time in which function is lost. Dealing with an incident within the first few hours may reduce the total time of the disruptive event by weeks.
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Europe is more vulnerable to natural disasters
10/12/2011
The significant increase in thenumber of natural hazards taking place in Europe according to the United Nations disaster risk reduction agency. The are warning that the region's governments need to implement prevention platforms to significantly reduce the danger they pose to their populations.
In 2010, Europe saw an 18.2 percent increase in disaster events compared to the decade's averages according to the chief of the UN International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR).
In terms of economic damages, Europe accounted for 14.3 percent of reported global disaster losses in 2010, with most of the damages caused by climatological and hydro meteorological events.
Although this is cause for concern, there is evidence that European governments are slowly implementing adequate disaster risk reduction measures:
National reports demonstrate a gradual evolution from a mindset of crisis and response to one of proactive risk reduction and safety. Countries who have or are going to establish national platforms (NPs) for disaster reduction are reporting significant and ongoing success in addressing cross cutting risk reduction issues - more than double compared to those countries without NPs.
Also highlighted Europe's participation in the 2010-2011 World Disaster Reduction Campaign - Making Cities Resilient:
Europe is the most active region in embracing the campaign: 378 European cities have joined the campaign to improve their resilience and to exchange their experiences and challenges.
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Developing a Disaster Recovery Testing Process
10/10/2011Most real disasters are much less well-structured than a test - so if you can't make the test work when you can plan for it in advance and stage everything just right, what chance will you have if the big one hits?
One way to get a workable DR plan is to do some up-front scenario analysis after the BIA is done and build up a set of layered responses to incidents of increasing severity. For the least serious impacts you can engineer high availability solutions - essentially disaster avoidance strategies. For disasters you cant avoid, you can build routine operational processes (things like rolling cluster upgrades, managed application failover, deliberate load shifting) that let you practice for a real problem, so your people are familiar with most of the work theyll need to do in a disaster. That will also exercise most of the technologies youll need and ensure theyre working reliably - and that the disaster wont be their first use.
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Wiring meltdown can be a disaster
10/01/2011
The design of data centers and large computer rooms always includes a cooling system. Yet many IT devices are located in distributed spaces outside of the computer room in closets, branch offices, and other locations that were never designed with provisions for cooling IT equipment. The power density of IT equipment has increased over time and the result is that distributed IT equipment such as VoIP routers, switches or servers often overheat or fail prematurely due to inadequate cooling.
To properly specify the appropriate cooling solution for a wiring closet, the temperature at which that closet should operate must first be specified. IT equipment vendors usually provide a maximum temperature under which their devices are designed to operate. For active IT equipment typically found in a wiring closet, this temperature is usually 104°F (40°C). This is the maximum temperature at which the vendor is able to guarantee performance and reliability for the stated warranty period. It is important to understand that although the maximum published operating temperature is acceptable per the manufacturer, operating at that temperature will not generally provide the same level of availability or longevity as operating at lower temperatures. Because of this, some IT equipment vendors also publish recommended operating temperatures for their equipment in addition to the maximum allowed. Typical recommended operating temperatures from IT equipment vendors are between 70°F (21°C) and 75°F (24°C).
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Hardware solutions for business continuity
09/16/2011A recent survey of 500 US companies finds more than 217 million person-hours were lost to unplanned interruption events: equivalent to approximately 65,000 workers idle and non-productive for an entire year! The same survey found that IT outages are considered substantially damaging to companies reputations, staff morale and customer loyalty.
The response of the technology industry has focused on high availability (HA) as a hedge against downtime. Common memes include:
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- The substitution of hypervisor-based server virtualization with on-the-fly guest machine re-hosting for conventional server computing
- The introduction of complex physical machine clustering in platforms supporting mission critical applications
- The adoption of Wide Area Network-based disk-to-disk data replication rather than traditional tape backup
Disaster Recovery Business Continuity Basics
09/12/2011The basics of a Disaster Recovery Business Continuity Plan are defined in the Janco Disaster Recovery Business Continuity Template. They are:
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Develop the contingency planning policy statement. A formal department or agency policy provides the authority and guidance necessary to develop an effective contingency plan. Conduct the business impact analysis (BIA). The BIA helps to identify and prioritize critical IT systems and components. Identify preventive controls. Measures taken to reduce the effects of system disruptions can increase system availability and reduce contingency life cycle costs. Develop recovery strategies. Thorough recovery strategies ensure that the system may be recovered quickly and effectively following a disruption. Develop an IT contingency plan. The contingency plan should contain detailed guidance and procedures for restoring a damaged system. Plan testing, training and exercises. Testing the plan identifies planning gaps, whereas training prepares recovery personnel for plan activation; both activities improve plan effectiveness and overall agency preparedness. Plan maintenance. The plan should be a living document that is updated regularly to remain current with system enhancements.
Testing Business Continuity Plans - Over 1/3 fail
09/08/2011
Testing at least once per month is important to maintain engineering best practices, to comply with stringent standards for data protection and recovery, and to gain confidence and peace of mind. In the midst of disaster is not the time to determine the flaws in your backup and recovery system. Backup alone is useless without the ability to efficiently recover, and technologists know all too well that the only path from "ought to work" to "known to work" is through testing.
A recent study found that only 16 percent of companies test their disaster recovery plan each month, with over half testing just once or twice per year, if ever. Adding to the concern, almost one-third of tests resulted in failure.
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The New Corporate ISO 22301 BC Standard: What It Takes To Comply
09/07/2011
If your organization's business continuity program was audited, would you survive the scrutiny? Understanding the communication requirements of the new ISO 22301 standard will help you assess how prepared you really are.As a new international standard, ISO 22301 will provide guidance for organizations on how to define, improve, and maintain their business continuity program. Businesses of any size or shape can benefit from learning how to fortify their plans to meet this new standard.
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Lifecycle of data protection
09/05/2011
Protecting your compan's data and applications means much more than just running a simple backup routine. It is about protecting your business assets throughout their lifecycle in terms of preservation, recoverability and availability. A sound data protection approach can help your company adapt more rapidly to changing and increasing opportunities. For example:
- It can help ensure that your applications are continually in operation, serving your customers, and enabling your business
- In the event of a file loss or disaster, it can minimize the length and severity of the disruption
- It can support cost-effective compliance with regulations, reducing business risk and the cost of compliance
Implementing an effective data protection strategy begins with evaluating the value of your company's data and then determining the proper set of business requirements for protecting it. Simply put, data that is mission-critical to your business requires a more robust data protection solution, and requires more frequent protection. This is a sound approach no matter how much data you have.
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Disaster Planning is Required for Virtual Applications
08/17/2011
A number of customers using the Microsoft-hosted Dynamics CRM Online and its Office 365 cloud service were reporting performance problems.
One CRM Online customer said problems began in the morning. The @MSCloudUS twitter account acknowledged the Office 365 problems, starting in the afternoon (EST).On the CRM Online front, "performance is slow for most users, to the point that some cant use CRM at all," one Microsoft CRM user said. His company is based in the U.S., he said, but international users of the system were affected, as well.
A Microsoft spokesperson said, "We were made aware of a few customers experiencing difficulty using their Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online service this morning. The customer impact was limited to some organizations in North America and has been resolved. Microsoft takes any downtime seriously, and customers will be reimbursed service charges per the terms of our SLA which guarantees 99.9% uptime."
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What is Rescue Point Objective (RPO)?
08/14/2011CIOs, CSO's, BC Managers constantly will work to improve their restoration point objective (RPO) and also recovery time objectives (RTO) by means of performing fast, non-disruptive backups, in addition to by performing data rescue. All comprehensive data safety solutions involve many criteria and contingencies.
Here are examples of the things that can fail with your data as well as backup requirements that must be addressed:
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- Accidental or malicious removal of critical data - Requirement that provides enable you to quickly and easily get back individual files and folders.
- Data that is displaced or corrupted over a period of time - Requirement to spin back individual records to renovate database corruptions. The ability to get back data from any previous moment in time, and have it as granular as is feasible.
- A crashed disk - Requirement to recoup a disk volume takes a different approach than recovering a single file, but it really should be done just as promptly, and with automation to help keep operational disruptions to the minimum.
- A server failure - Requirement to bring back operations when replacing a broken server may just be complicated by the desire to install different drivers within the new system if the hardware is not an exact match. It helps to get the capability to move the coating workload to a standby server (with completely different hardware) or virtual server while system is being exchanged or repaired.
- A local or local disaster - Requirement as you lose an entire company to fire, flood, and other disaster, have a newly released copy of your important info in another location that is certainly outside the disaster area.
- Remote offices and side branch offices - Requirement to undertake a process in place to with minimal technical assistance as remote and branch offices often would not have the luxury of experiencing an on-site technical resource to help you in backups and restores.
- Resource-intensive backup processes - Requirement frequent and even continuous backup which is not resource-intensive.
Security breaches - Necessity to secure data. If moving data between internet websites, it needs to be protected from potential stability breaches. A breach involving data security, whether actual damage is complete or not, can be devastating towards your company's reputation, as dozens of great enterprises and government agencies have found in recent years.
Basic questions to ask about your business continuity plan
08/07/2011
The list of natural and manmade disasters with which businesses have had to contend early in the 21st century is long. Many organizations have felt the devastating effects of the September 11 terrorist attacks, acts of bioterrorism involving anthrax, and bombings in London, Madrid and Bali. The severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak, the South Asian tsunami and Hurricane Katrina also have had costly, far-reaching impacts on businesses.
Disruptions resulting from these and other disasters have rippled across supply chains, shaken entire industries and taken their toll on employee, customer and partner relations. Not surprisingly, organizations of all types and sizes are making crisis preparedness and response a key focus of their business continuity planning. Chances are, your organization is taking a proactive approach and continually looking at ways to minimize the impact that potential crises can have on your business processes and technology systems. Yet, even though your company's business continuity plan most likely serves to protect your company's physical assets, such as its data, network(s), core business applications and facilities, how well does it address the human side of disasters?
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