Most executives consider a disaster a hurricane, tornado, flood or earthquake. The truth is a disaster is any event that prevents your business from accessing the data and systems it needs to operate, including regional power outages, cyber attacks, employee sabotage and hardware failure. Every company faces the risk of IT interruptions that can grind business to a halt.
Listed here are 10 reasons your business should have a Disaster Recovery Plan.
Natural disasters have cost the global economy around $2.5 Trillion since 2000. Almost every area of Australia is subject to some sort of natural disaster. You shouldn’t leave your businesses’ well-being up to chance.
You can buy the best equipment on the market but that does not safe guard you from malfunctions, lemons and breaks. 99% of IT professionals have experienced a hardware failure.
Many businesses experience a disaster (destruction, fire, floods etc.) at some point, and many of those businesses will go under in just over a year. Lost revenue and crippling effects of data loss can be the final straw for many.
In a switched on business world, your customers expect to have access 24/7. Downtime means a lack of availability to your customers and a loss of business in the immediate and possibly long term.
Downtime and lost data can ruin reputation, brand and diminish trust that can result in lost revenue, yet only 35% of small and medium sized enterprises have a DRP in place. Are you rolling the dice with your brand?
72% of web users report abandoning a company website for a competitor’s due to frustrations with the site.
When a website goes down, online shoppers are not willing to wait for the unknown time at which the site will be back online.
If you aren’t protecting your internet and network you leave the door wide open for your competitors.
7. Compliance and regulations require it.
65% of companies need to produce DR reports for things such as compliance.
Disaster Recovery helps safeguarding data required by HIPAA regulations regarding record keeping & BIA (business impact analysis).
43% of companies were immediately put out of business by a “major loss” of computer records, and another 51% permanently closed their doors within two years – leaving a mere six percent
“survival” rate.
Are you running duplicate sites, multiple servers, all to ensure if something happens to one you have another?
Consider the cost savings by implementing virtual machines that can recover data in case of disaster. Before virtualization, disaster recovery would have cost at least three times as much because an organization needed to have multiple data centers, specialized software and large network connections.
Humans make mistakes. 80% of unplanned outages are due to untested and ill-planned changes made by administrators and 60% of availability and performance errors are the result of misconfigurations.
We can help put a Recovery plan in place for your data.