Economic Downturn Not Time to Reduce Focus on Disaster Preparedness
Spurred by a worsening outlook for the economy, many companies are taking a hard look at information technology (IT) expenditures to
identify projects that can be cut or deferred. However, the business needs for available data and regulatory compliance requirements
do not slow down, even in the face of an economic downturn.
Focused on short-term pressures to make budget cuts, it often escapes companies that disaster preparedness needs may actually
be greater during economic slowdowns. For instance, many organizations are reducing costs by consolidating equipment. But because
of e-discovery and compliance requirements, data must still be retained even with a cap on spending.
When reviewing companies IT programs to ensure optimal preparedness we ask:
1. What are their risks?
2. Which programs must be maintained - and how can we best maintain them?
3. What is the impact of technology changes to disaster plans?
Make risk assessment a priority. As organizations are challenged to scrutinize how to spend their dollars, conducting availability
risk assessments to identify vulnerabilities can provide excellent guides on how to determine budget priorities.
Companies need to plan for a range of scenarios from short-term outages to full-blown disasters. Risk assessments provide a
comprehensive review of a companys current information availability strategies and analyze the business impact of potential
disruptions. When conducting assessments, it is essential to measure and assess three major areas:
- Information security, covering policy, procedure and regulatory response.
- Information management, examining program controls, the organization and flow of information, and continuity of services.
- Information architecture, looking at network design, facility and environmental infrastructure and system design.
Risk assessments provide an objective evaluation to senior executives, describing how a firms information availability strategy
compares to similar organizations outlining strengths and weaknesses. They also contribute a valuable guide in determining where
to spend money to address vulnerabilities.
Keep Essential Programs Going
Typically, during an economic downturn, internal IT resources become stretched. This leads to companies looking for outside support
to fill gaps to get essential work done and still save money. One area third-party experts can provide assistance is maintaining and
testing disaster recovery plans. Disaster recovery plans need to be viewed as ongoing programs not projects that can be put on
the shelf for a year.
Another area that often faces cutbacks in tight budgetary times is recovery environments.
Companies are pressured to scale back an IT recovery site. This often leads to the recovery installation not matching a current
production environment. Critical applications can then no longer be supported at recovery sites. To address this issue, companies can
leverage third party managed services that host secondary applications at a third-party site and protect data with disaster
recovery solutions.
Have Disaster Plans that Keep Pace with Technology Changes.
Many organizations are moving today to virtualization technologies to generate IT cost savings by consolidating servers and storage.
But moving to these environments with untested plans to recover data should an unplanned outage occur can turn a problem into a
disaster that impacts an entire company.
Data managed by virtualized systems still needs to be accessible. Business continuity plans need to be updated to account for
virtual environments to assure information availability.
During economic downturns, remember to (1) assess the risks to the organization; (2) pinpoint which programs must be maintained -
and the best approach for them to continue; and (3) consider the impact of technology changes to disaster plans.
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