Posts Tagged ‘Disaster Recovery’

Advice for dealing with risks in public cloud computing

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

Public cloud computing risks are numerous enough to field a top 10 — or even more. Professional organizations and CIOs are developing threat lists to help them come to grips with the public cloud, an entity that will continue to seep into the enterprise IT environment whether they like it or not.
SearchCIO has just published the following article: http://tinyurl4.info/top10risksinpubliccloud

OpsCentre’s Disaster Recovery Video on YouTube

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Here is the link to OpsCentre’s video about Disaster Recovery on our YouTube Channel…

Business Continuity – Is your business ‘Recovery Ready’?

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Do you know the answers to these questions for your organisation?

1. How would we continue to function in an extended building evacuation such as a power outage or flood in the basement?

2. Who are our most critical customers and how would we contact them?

3. What is our current IT Disaster Recovery capability? How long would it take to restore our most critical systems, applications and data?

4. Do we outsource critical business functions to third party organisations services? What if they were to fail.

5. Do our staff know how to get out of our building safely, where to go, and how do we account for them?

6. In the event of a disaster, would we need to implement manual workarounds to cater for reduced staff numbers, loss of IT systems, or denial of access to our building?

OpsCentre recommends undertaking a Readiness Assessment to identify where you are exposed and the possible impacts.  If you would like assistance with evaluating the health of your business continuity program, we would be happy to assist. Don’t forget we are offering a complimentary initial consultation from which you will receive an ‘actionable’ health check report.

Click here for more information about the OpsCentre complimentary consultation.

 

Recommended considerations for selecting an Alternate Recovery Site

Friday, February 26th, 2010

Do you need to select an alternate recovery site for your business continuity or IT disaster recovery?

In the event of a disaster, it is crucial that your organisation can transition as smoothly as possible into a recovery site and commence working on critical business processes as quickly as possible.  Ensuring that an appropriate alternate recovery site has been selected is key to this smooth transition.

OpsCentre has released a succinct 2 page guide to considerations for selecting the right recovery site.

The report covers aspect such as:

  1. Location of the recovery site
  2. A list of must-have pre-requisites that every recovery site should have
  3. Site Security
  4. Technical Infrastructure considerations
  5. Other site characteristics to be considered

Go HERE to request your copy of the COMPLIMENTARY, OBLIGATION-FREE Alternate Site Selection Report.

7 Habits of Highly Effective Business Continuity

Friday, January 29th, 2010

1. The Senior Executive actively supports Business Continuity

The CEO\Director\General Manager that believes in and wants a functional Business Continuity program in place is a critical success factor.

To have a senior Executive that is responsible for setting the priorities and vision for the organisation to stand behind BCP and communicate this to the staff is a powerful change motivator. 

2. A Whole of Business Approach

A business continuity program that prioritises the organisation from the Executive’s birdseye perspective as well as analysing business impacts across all business functions in a consistent manner will lead to a better informed business continuity strategy being proposed. It allows the Executive to see the requirements of the business in a single snapshot and make a cost benefit justified decision on the level of continuity required.

3. A Single Point of Business Continuity Management

Someone needs to be responsible for BCP at an organisational level. It needs to be in their job description and a priority for them, otherwise it runs the risk of falling between the cracks. With one person accountable for co-ordinating, aggregating, monitoring the overall Business Continuity program and reporting to the Executive, the program is more likely to stay visible and maintain momentum.

4. Testing, Testing, Testing

Business Continuity should be viewed as an ongoing continuous improvement program. And as such testing is vital. It highlights flaws and validates assumptions in your business continuity plans, giving opportunity to improve them. Testing builds confidence and competence within the business continuity team as it brings home how the strategy would actually work in a variety of scenarios and how the roles will interrelate. An untested Business Continuity Plan cannot be considered viable.

5. Embedding BCP into job descriptions and procedures

The various BCP roles such as BCP Manager, Command Team Leader, Business Unit Leader, etc should be written into position descriptions so that it is very clear that is a part of the responsibilities of the staff members. Procedures for new projects, business changes and IT changes should include provision for ensuring the change has BCP/ IT Disaster Recovery aspects taken into account. All changes should have an impact analysis conducted that includes impact on BCP/IT Disaster Recovery procedures.

6. Starting on the right foot

An induction training package that briefs new employees on the Business Continuity and Emergency Management strategies and plans in place is a great way to start them off on the right foot, highlighting the importance of this to the organisation.

7. Maintenance

The person responsible as BCP Manager should be tasked with ensuring maintenance of the documentation occurs on a regular basis. Outputs from changes and testing sessions all need to be fed into the plans.  Periodically the BIA should be revisited and organisation’s prioritisations and maximum tolerable outages reviewed.

Disaster Recovery – Backup and Recovery Optimization

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

Gartner and Sungard partnered to produce research regarding ways that backup and recovery can be optimised to reduce or contain costs.

The report contains some useful tips and considerations for IT Managers/Directors that are looking for ways to manage IT costs.

See the full free Gartner online research report here.

Latest Global Disaster Recovery research just released by Symantec

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Symantec Corp have now released their annual Global Disaster Recovery Survey.  Surveying 1,650 companies worldwide in June 2009, the target audience was CIO and CTO Executives within companies that had 5,000 or more staff.

The survey assesses many aspects of disaster recovery, including Cost of Downtime, Planned Budgets, Impacts of DR Testing and Virtualisation Trends.

The report can be found here: http://www.symantec.com/about/news/resources/press_kits/detail.jsp?pkid=disasterrecovery