The Covid-19 pandemic has been the catalyst for momentous change throughout the IT landscape, and for Disaster Recovery (DR) in particular, as the global pandemic made widespread disruption and uncertainty a clear and present reality.
“The onset of Covid-19 was one kind of disaster as companies had to quickly invoke business continuity and disaster recovery plans to cope with employees being denied access to their offices. It has put into sharp focus many enterprises’ lack of DR plans and accelerated the penetration of Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) in the market,” says Andrew Cruise, managing director at Routed, a vendor-neutral cloud infrastructure provider.
According to Cruise, having coherent DR plans in place are a non-negotiable, especially given the wide-ranging threats today’s businesses face on an ongoing basis. He says that while there are a number of obvious disasters that CIOs should be planning for, there are some no less high-profile disasters that don’t receive adequate attention until it’s too late.
“Ransomware is of course one of the most common and insidious disasters that can occur, but another which receives very little press, mostly due to embarrassment, is internal sabotage, closely followed by employee error. These are much more common than fire, theft, and flood, and all require a slightly different approach to ensure a resolution.”
Cruise highlights four key factors to keep in mind while planning for effective recovery from disasters:
Disaster Recovery (DR) plans are the technical part of Business Continuity (BC) planning and should never sit in isolation. The objective of DR plans is to satisfy Business Continuity objectives, which are typically deployed to maintain some level of business function in the face of an unexpected destructive event. The scope of a DR plan usually covers IT only. This would cover the accessibility of a recovery environment at a minimum, including the recovery and useability of data and applications, and the network’s access to said data.
Test your Disaster Recovery plans. If your Disaster Recovery doesn’t work, it’s like paying for insurance and then not getting a pay-out when you claim. Disaster Recovery is not trivial to implement, but it should be easy enough to test, and your provider should have this built into their solution both technically and commercially. No one wants to fix the roof while it is raining or change a tyre at 100km/h, and businesses cannot afford to address serious technical problems in the face of a major disaster. Testing Disaster Recovery plans show up performance and capacity issues and allow organisations to plan accordingly, which may include switching providers.
Find the right skills. Anyone who is part of a Disaster Recovery Team should be well organised, and calm in the face of pressure. Clearly, technical skills to operate, manage, and test the environment are also required. Enterprises need to ensure they have access to these skills from their provider.
Consider the costs. Although cloud-based disaster recovery solutions are designed for the enterprise, it is available, in scale, and therefore within the reach of smaller businesses too. Disaster Recovery should not be more than 20-30 percent of an organisation’s IT production budget. Keep in mind that it is not necessary to invest in capital, by purchasing the target hardware and software. Businesses can buy disaster recovery as a service, and rent what is needed, based on usage. This will prevent your business from being affected by any disaster like what Covid-19 did.