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Disaster Preparedness and Data Recovery Plan
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Data is the backbone of any organization; data theft or losing data can be devastating for any enterprise, irrespective of its size. Data loss can be detrimental to company operations, consumer trust, and market reputation. Unfortunately, several organizations take data backup systems and recovery plans at a light node and don’t pay enough attention to them. The absence of a Disaster Recovery (DR) plan can cause you trouble over time, especially in case of disruptive events. If you’re uncertain about your plan, these statistics may prompt you to act quickly.

According to a US Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) survey, 40% to 60% of small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) either never reopened or failed to recover business after a natural disaster.

According to a Stanford University-Tessian study, 90% of breach incidents are caused by employees’ mistakes or human error.

Why is a disaster recovery plan essential for organizations?

Natural, technological, and accidental disasters can happen at any time. A disaster recovery plan is essential to protect your data from accidental or intentional incidents.

Natural disasters like fire accidents, earthquakes, hurricanes, floods, pandemics, etc., can happen anytime and without warning. You may not get any time to prepare. Therefore, organizations often scramble to recover systems and applications needed to maintain day-to-day operations when a disaster happens. Storing financial data, client information, and intellectual property onsite may result in partial or complete data loss. This can cause costly downtime, reduced credibility, lost productivity and revenue, and damage to your market reputation. Plus, you may have to pay hefty fines and other recovery expenses.

Onsite backup systems can fail due to technological disasters. To ensure complete protection, consider offsite or cloud data storage, which keeps your data safe even if your equipment is destroyed.

Apart from natural and technological disasters, your organization may have to face disasters caused by unintentional mistakes of your employees. There are several activities that can lead to data loss, such as:

>> Clicking on a phishing email
>> Accidentally spilling liquids like coffee, tea, etc., on a laptop or desktop computer
>> Losing or breaking of mobile or laptop
>> Misplacing hardcopies with sensitive information or important documents
>> Experiencing a hard drive failure

Accidents can lead to data loss. Prepare an effective Disaster Recovery (DR) plan to protect your business from any disaster.

Data breaches can occur during natural disasters, tech failures, or human error. Protect your business with a Backup and Disaster Recovery (BDR) solution that offers encryption and offsite data replication.

You can work with your Managed IT Services Provider to put a plan in place and recover your data as needed. Especially for SMBs, it is helpful to have multiple backups, both onsite and offsite, to prevent data loss.

What needs to be considered in your BDR plan?

For effective disaster recovery planning, you need to consider strategizing, planning, deploying suitable technology, and regularly testing and maintaining your systems. Additionally, you can seek assistance from your managed IT services partner to develop a comprehensive disaster recovery plan. Here are some key activities that will help you prepare for a disaster and minimize its impact.

Identify the potential disasters and rank them according to the severity of impact on your organization:

First, you need to list every possible reason disrupting business continuity, such as natural disasters, equipment failure, insider threats, and employee errors. Then evaluate those risks and consider their impact on your business, possible downtime, etc. This information will help you plan how the most critical business operations could be maintained in unfavorable scenarios.

Decide RPO and RTO

Recovery Point Objective (RPO) and Recovery Time Objective (RTO) are two critical aspects of a business. RPO refers to the maximum amount of data an organization can tolerate losing after a failure. Similarly, RTO refers to the maximum duration an organization should take to restore normal operations following an outage or data loss. Therefore, it is crucial to clearly define RPO and RTO for your organization to face any eventuality and make a suitable plan to survive the situation.

Partner with a reliable Managed Service Provider

When developing a DR plan, your goal should be a robust backup system for your entire organization and an efficient retrieval process to restore the system after a disaster. This is where you can consider the expertise and resources of a Managed IT Services Provider (MSP) to help you develop an effective DR plan.

With the help of an MSP, you can opt for the Cloud storage facility to keep your data safe and out of the office premises. A reputed MSP can offer you a fully automated data backup process, a round-the-clock monitoring facility and ensure quick data retrieval in case of an eventuality.

Involve your whole organization

Make everyone staff of your organization well aware of your disaster recovery plan. Take them through the DR plan, explain every aspect, assign specific roles to specific employees and ensure that they understand their responsibility in case of an emergency. Test your DR plan as a team at regular intervals to keep everyone alert.

Build systems and procedures to minimize severe impacts

For an effective DR plan, your concern should be minimizing as severe impacts as possible and quick recovery after an eventuality. To do so, your key considerations should be:

Distribute significant data and applications across multiple cloud storage
Not rely on an on-premises data center or hardware
An MSP can handle your DR plan development, letting you focus on urgent priorities during an emergency.

Conclusion:

Many businesses, especially SMBs—neglect to develop a disaster recovery plan. Without a DR plan, they have no protection from the impact of any kind of disaster. So, it would be best if you had a DR plan to safeguard your intellectual assets, data, and crucial applications during a disruptive event.

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