Symantec: Disaster Recovery Pressures Mount for Business
Organizations are feeling the pressure to ensure their disaster recovery plan is ready to go and unfailingly reliable, according to a report released this week by Symantec. The report, the security software vendor's fifth annual IT Disaster Recovery survey, found that while DR times were reduced from previous years, disaster recovery testing and virtualization are still major challenges for organizations.
According to the survey, the average cost of executing/implementing disaster recovery plans for each downtime incident worldwide $287,600. However, for organizations in North America, the median cost can climb to as high as $900,000. Globally, this number is highest for healthcare and financial services organizations. In North America, the median cost for financial institutions is $650,000, according to the report.
Most organizations, 93 percent of respondents, said they have had to put their DR plans to work and that it takes on average three hours to achieve skeleton operations after an outage, and four hours to be up and running. This is dramatically improved over the 2008 findings, where only three percent of respondents reported that they could achieve skeleton operations within 12 hours, and 31 percent believed they would have baseline operations within one day, said Symantec officials in a release on the findings.
The report also said that respondents report DR testing increasingly impacts customers and revenue, and one in four tests fail. Nearly a third of organizations don't test virtual environments as part of their disaster recovery plans, and a slightly larger percentage of virtual environments aren't regularly backed up.
The study also shows that while DR budgets are higher in 2009, they are expected to remain flat over the next few years. The annual median budget for disaster recovery initiatives, including backup, recovery, clustering, archiving, spare servers, replication, tape, services, disaster recovery plan development and offsite costs at data centers surveyed is $50 million. According to respondents, this number will continue to grow throughout 2009, but more than half, 52 percent, of respondents believe that budgets will be flat in 2010.
The report makes no mention of the CSO's role in DR but did find 70 percent of respondents involved the CIO, CTO or IT director on their DR committees. This is a significant increase from last year's research where 33 percent of respondents indicated executive involvement, said Symantec.
"As budgets increased over the past year, disaster recovery initiatives have become more of a competitive differentiator, and impact of downtown on customers is greater than ever. Another reason for executive involvement is the increase of applications that are seen as mission critical," Symantec officials said in the statement. "Sixty percent of applications were deemed mission critical by respondents, and nearly the same amount is covered in disaster recovery plans. Any sort of outage to these systems will have an enormous impact to the business."
CSOonline.com
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Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
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