Business Continuity And Disaster Recovery Honolulu HI

Hackers, power outages, denial of service attacks, application failures, employee error are helping companies to focus on the necessity of a business continuity plan. Read below to learn Business Continuity And Disaster Recovery.

Local Companies

Saibr
(808) 944-9814
900 Fort Street Mall
Honolulu, HI
Infosoft Inc
(808) 838-7780
2810 Paa St Ste A
Honolulu, HI
Mac On Wheels
(808) 585-6281
1149 Bethel St Ste 300
Honolulu, HI
Busch Consulting Inc
(808) 941-3695
PO Box 23360
Honolulu, HI
Counterpoint Hawaii
(808) 531-2226
Honolulu, HI
Paradise Canyon Systems Inc
(808) 521-8411
1003 Bishop St Ste 880
Honolulu, HI
Datanet Systems Inc
(808) 531-2226
Honolulu, HI
Advance Data Corp
(808) 842-6689
1613 Houghtailing St
Honolulu, HI
Foundry Networks Inc
(808) 521-2135
Honolulu, HI
Tk Consultants
(808) 732-2009
Honolulu, HI

As companies prepared for Y2K, many IT executives, risk managers, CFOs and corporate managers realized that recovering computing systems, networks and data was not enough. As Y2K approached, it became more apparent that a disciplined approach was needed to recover not only data and systems, but also business processes, facilities and manpower to restore and maintain critical functions.

The starting point is a risk assessment. Identify and define your mission critical business processes and systems. Review them for vulnerabilities and identify steps required for restoration and recovery. For your data, make sure it is backed up to secure and separate locations. Evaluate various storage solutions including storage area networks, data replication systems, new virtualization systems, network attached storage devices and managed storage. Pay significant attention also to your telecommunications providers to ensure they have built diversity and redundancy into their networks and have well developed and tested contingency plans.

The risk assessment will start to drive out real questions on the business impacts and losses that could result from disruptions. Mission critical impacts, key business functions, processes and records must all be identified. This is also the time to determine resource requirements and acceptable recovery time frames.

Various recovery strategies should be evaluated to achieve your cost, reliability and time to recover objectives. Include physical, technological, legal, regulatory and personnel considerations when you evaluate alternatives. Common points of failure are a lack of executive and budget support and not fully engaging employees. Along with your data, employees are your most valuable asset.

Business continuity planning sounds expensive and it can be time-consuming. However, losing your business functions, processes and systems as well as your company, customer and financial data can be devastating. Build your plan. Train, test, train and test again. About the Author:

Robert Mahood has significant technology and management experience in data communications, internet, storage, disaster recovery and data recovery. He is currently the president of Midwest Data Recovery. www.midwestdatarecovery.com

bmahood@midwestdatarecovery.com


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