Data,
Foundation of Today’s Business
Data
is not only the foundation of businesses in all
industries but remains a vital irreplaceable
strategic asset. But, this asset is threatened today more than ever by viruses, Trojan Horses and malicious software spread by the unscrupulous on the Internet. According to the U.S. Department of
Labor, 93% of companies who experience a
significant data loss will be out of business
within 5 years.
As a
result, data protection has become a critical
component in an organization’s disaster recovery
and business continuity plans. Today’s disaster-planning professionals are responsible for
ensuring uninterrupted operation and immediate
recovery of data. Faced with increasingly narrow
recovery windows and "zero tolerance" for
disruption they will have no choice but to look
outside the box for recovery solutions. The
ability of traditional disaster recovery and
business solutions to fulfill corporate
objectives in the overall business continuity
scheme should be evaluated and a new methodology
introduced.
With
its ability to most quickly and efficiently
perform backup and recovery, online backup is
responding to the demands of today’s businesses
in these uncertain times. Its no wonder a
technology that used to be seen as
unconventional and experimental, is quickly
becoming mainstream. IDC estimates that through
2006, rapid growth will continue in the area of
remote backup.
Lawyer’s Weekly, the nation’s top source of
legal information for practicing attorneys, has
used online backup for years to protect their
data. “My feeling is that you're only as good as
your last backup. Our company has many remote
locations without systems administrators. As a
result, we really have come to depend on online
backup as a means of assuring that our backups
are done on a daily basis at these sites,” said
Tom Bannister, Systems Manager, Lawyer’s Weekly.
Data
Management Evolves
Remarkable changes
in the way businesses work, are being fueled by
online and other electronic processes going on
24 hours a day. Business processes are becoming
more compressed, and business activities that
took days now happen within hours or minutes
globally. Companies without a strong foothold in
technology will be disadvantaged when facing the
evolutionary trend of business changes. Disaster
recovery and business continuity planning must
change to coincide with the fast-paced and
highly competitive business environment and
offer protection against uncontrollable looming
disasters. Continuity Planners must turn to
solutions that are internet-based.
The
recent SQL Slammer virus was a prime example of
why contingency planning must change to keep up
with technology-dependant businesses. Although
SQL Slammer’s effect could have carried a more
damaging payload, it brought down 13,000
ATM machines at Bank of America, making it
impossible for customers to withdraw cash for an
entire weekend and reportedly caused widespread
damage at HP and even Microsoft itself. The
disaster recovery and business continuity
planning industry was forced to take notice.
Myths
About Online Backup
Whenever an innovative idea threatens to replace
current solutions in day-to-day business
practices, myths begin to sprout like weeds
spotting your favorite golfing green. The
uncomfortable reality is that many businesses
today suffer from insufficient backup plans.
Data backup is critical for every company.
Remember the last time you didn't suffer from
backup headaches? You can't.
A new
solution entered the market in the mid 80’s but
didn’t launch until the World Wide Web
phenomenon took off. Only then did it catch the
attention of IT professionals responsible for
safeguarding mission-critical data. Online
backup or electronic vaulting, no matter the
coined term, eliminates many typical backup
headaches. The ability to automate your backup
and remove the data off-site to a secure vault
with a click of a mouse button is now a reality.
Online backup is the most innovative,
cost-effective and reliable solution out there
today. But dispelling the myths about online
backup continues to be a challenge for companies
offering this technology.
Myth One: Online backup is too expensive.
Initially it may appear that way. Compare a tape
scenario for instance. Hardware, software
licenses, tapes, personnel -- and let us not
forget basic human error, add to the cost of
traditional back up procedures. Additional
costs accrue with traditional off-site courier
service and tape solutions have large up-front
and sometimes unexpected costs, while online
backup costs are declining. AmeriVault Corp.™
predicts a double-digit annual decrease in cost
due to bandwidth and storage hardware pricing
declines. A small ten gigabyte user with daily
backup would pay approximately $460.00 for
traditional albeit partial service; while the
same user would pay approximately $294.00 for
complete, automated service. In addition, online
backup technology utilizes a company's existing
telecom lines. A company can better justify the
24 x 7 cost of its dedicated Internet
connection. Online backup eliminates all these
traditional cost factors. With total automation,
local backup and off-site protection occur
simultaneously.
Myth Two: Data is not secure on the Internet.
Online backup
utilizes the same technology the U.S. Government
uses for its security. Encrypted, fragmented
data is sent over telecom lines -- pieces of a
puzzle in gibberish language. Online backup
vendors can offers clients a highly secure VPN
(Virtual Private Network) connection. This
higher level of security ensures that all
communication between the client and the vault
is encrypted. Online backup is actually more
secure than storing unencrypted data tapes in a
remote vault.
Myth Three: Online Backup can't handle a fortune
500 company's data.
Handling large
amounts of data over relatively small bandwidth
is a popular feature of online backup. An
initial backup or "seed" of the server's data is
extracted. The Delta Processing technology then
seeks out updated portions of changed files.
Only the fragmented change of data is sent to
the vault. Large-volume and highly redundant
disk storage systems store the data online.
Online backup providers service businesses with
a responsibility to ensure that storage space is
always available, no matter what the size. To
further ensure data integrity, reliability and
recovery, the massive amounts of data online are
backed up to tape on a daily basis, and shipped
to an underground vault for safekeeping.
An
Inevitable Evolution
Despite the current myths surrounding online
backup, unavoidably it is fast becoming the
standard in the business of data backup storage.
Online backup has proven itself to be a
fundamental component of disaster recovery and
business continuity plans. Traditional recovery
solutions must be re-tailored to accommodate the
new recovery and continuity alternatives
available to businesses in this fast-paced and
uncertain climate. No longer can businesses rely
on protecting their most important asset with
inefficient methods.
Loss
of data and disasters are inevitable, and so is
online backup. The Internet has radically
altered the global economy and, with it, the
management of securing and restoring data.
Companies that wait until disaster strikes to
implement more efficient means of backing up
their valuable data, will become extinct like
the dinosaurs who once roamed our planet.