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Protecting Your Data, Protecting Your
Business
By Paul Hrabal
December 2004
There
is no doubt that there is a new focus on business continuity and data
protection. The impact of recent
world events, coupled with an overwhelming dependency on electronic data in
virtually every business sector has caused a majority of organizations to
reexamine their data protection strategies.
For
Fortune 500 companies, these aspects of disaster recovery planning often involve
investing millions of dollars in completely redundant off-site systems and/or
data centers. However, for thousands
of smaller companies around the world, effective data protection is an equally
daunting task.
In
this article, we will look at some of the major aspects of corporate data
protection and business continuity planning and explain why they are such
crucial components of an enterprise's overall disaster recovery strategy.
Finally, we will discuss how managed service providers are offering
companies simpler and more cost-effective options for protecting their data,
guaranteeing the continuity of their business against future disasters.
Data:
Protecting an Organization's Most Important Asset:
There are four primary assets needed to
effectively operate an information system: facilities, hardware, network, and
data. In the event of a disaster,
hardware and networks can be replaced and facilities can be moved to a new
location. With the exception of
data, virtually every company system asset is replaceable.
Every organization has an indispensable
core set of data. Whether it is
payroll information, customer records, research, financial records, or email
files, all corporate data is valuable and vulnerable to loss or irreparable
damage. Data loss can result from
any number of factors, such as:
-
Human
error
-
Operating
system or application software bugs
-
Hardware
failure
-
Fire,
smoke, or water damage
-
Power
outages
-
Employee
theft or fraud
-
Man-made
disasters such as sabotage, hacking, or viruses
-
Natural
disasters such as earthquakes or hurricanes
Any one of these factors can cause data
loss, and the results can be catastrophic. It
can result in the permanent loss of information or hundreds of hours and
thousands of dollars to repair the damage. Regardless
of the cause, data disruption and loss poses a significant risk for any
business. It has a negative impact
in real dollars, lost opportunity, client dissatisfaction, and overall
organizational image.
So what must companies to do preserve
their data? They must have a plan
that incorporates the following three components:
-
Backup: This is the process of copying important data and
maintaining duplicate copies for restoration in case of data loss or damage.
A variety of file versions are necessary to ensure that it is possible to
restore the most recent usable copy of the data required.
Protecting data backups offsite is a necessary precaution for disaster
recovery, and multiple generations of backups provide the ability to recover to
a particular point in time.
-
Archive: Archiving involves copying disk file systems and
placing the copy (usually on tape) into long-term storage.
Archives create a legally acceptable business history and can be used to
free up hard disk space by allowing users to create an off-line version of
static data or files and delete the online copy.
-
Recovery: Recovery is the process of recovering
from an outage or disaster. In
off-site vaulting of data, backup media is protected in a remote, secure
location as part of the tape rotation scheme.
This off-site media is available for system recovery if the on-site media
is lost or damaged in a disaster.
Today, you don't need to be one of
the largest corporations in the world to have a best-in-class data protection
strategy that incorporates all these components.
Later, we will discuss the newer, cost-effective options available to
organizations today. First, we'll
discuss how data protection ensures a company's long-term viability through
business continuity.
Business
Continuity: Planning for the Worst
According
to a 2001 survey by Gartner, technology purchasing decision makers cite disaster
recovery and business continuity among their top five priorities.
Business continuity is the process of providing for the continuation of
critical business services regardless of any event that may occur.
This means ensuring continuity of an organization's data as well as its
Web, database and file servers, and all of its business-critical applications.
A business continuity plan is a critical aspect of an organization's
risk management strategy and is instrumental to its survival, should disaster
occur. A comprehensive business
continuity plan will help:
-
Protect
and secure data
-
Shorten
disaster recovery time
-
Improve
organizational resilience
-
Reduce
risk and exposure to loss
-
Decrease
downtime
-
Enable
compliance with regulatory and legal requirements
The
objective of business continuity planning and data protection is to minimize the
impact of a disaster upon an organization. So
how do organizations deal with
business continuity and data protection? You
don't need the resources of the Fortune 500 to develop a sound business
continuity plan. Any company can be
devastated if their data is lost or their servers go down.
For companies with an eye on the bottom line, managed service providers
offer an alternative solution.
Managed
Service Providers: Disaster Recovery for the Rest of Us
For businesses that do not maintain large data centers or IT
staffs, data protection and business continuity can be cumbersome and
error-prone. By some estimates, more
than 12 million U.S. based businesses do not fully backup data or recover business data
after a server crash.
Even companies that have
data protection and business continuity plans in place often do not do an
adequate job. Many do not have
sufficient IT staff to adequately prepare for disaster recovery.
In addition, traditional batch-style, tape-based backup continues to be a
costly, labor-intensive process requiring frequent manual intervention and great
posing potential for error. As a
result, many organizations perform bulk server backup when they can and store
tapes offsite even less frequently. In
the event of a disaster, these companies are left trying to recover their
businesses using data that is weeks, or even months, out of date.
Today,
advances in data replication and security technologies combined with reduced
bandwidth costs allow managed service providers to offer online backup,
recovery, and electronic vaulting services to businesses with limited IT
resources. Managed service providers
offer data protection services remotely, including continuous online data
backup, recovery, and electronic vaulting. Unlike
traditional methods of data protection, where data is typically backed up every
24 hours at best, managed service providers offer continuous data backup,
safeguarding an organization against data loss and helping them immediately
recover and restore lost data in the event of a disaster.
By using a managed service
provider, organizations retain front-end control of their data protection
operations, while handing off burdensome back-end tasks such as server backup,
device maintenance, tape management, and off-site removal and storage.
Other benefits of using a managed service provider for data protection
and business continuity planning include:
-
Simple and low-risk data
removal: Data is no longer at risk of
not being removed or mislaid during the removal process.
A managed service provider utilizes low-cost Internet connections through
a secured network connection to a backup server located in a protected off-site
data center vault. Therefore, data
is automatically and immediately sent off-site.
Tape damage or mishandling as well as transportation issues are
eliminated.
-
Safe and accessible data
archiving: By using a managed service
provider, data is never in an unsafe environment and is always accessible.
A managed service provider addresses concerns over improper storage by
protecting data off-site in a secure data center.
-
Reliable data recovery: Problems
surrounding the recovery of data through traditional means such as the
inaccessibility of current data and slow recovery are eliminated by using a
managed service provider.
-
Ease of manageability: Managed
service providers allow customers to manage their data protection process
through a personalized Web management interface.
This allows them to view the status of their data and initiate recovery
from anywhere, through any Web browser. While
the service provider assumes responsibility and automates back-end functions,
users retain overall control of their data protection by creating customized
backup policies, checking status, and initiating restore operations whenever
needed.
Gartner estimates that two
out of five companies that experience a disaster will go out of business in five
years. Companies today can't afford
not to have a data protection and business continuity strategy as part of their
overall disaster recovery plan. Managed
service providers offer their clients solutions that won't overburden their
internal resources or tax their budgets, while giving them the protection and
reliability that they need.
Paul
Hrabal is President of U.S. Data Trust Corporation (www.usdatatrust.com).
U.S. Data Trust provides fully managed online backup and recovery services for
small to medium sized businesses.
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