Disaster Recovery in Cloud Computing
Cloud recovery refers to the strategies enterprise businesses employ to ensure their data and essential applications are saved and easily retrievable.
Part of running a successful business is looking toward the future. This can include predicting trends and anticipating opportunities for better sales or demand for new products and services. It can also include being prepared for possible threats to your operations and infrastructure.
Business owners who prepare for the unknown will be ahead of the curve if a disaster strikes. Disasters can include natural occurrences such as fires, floods, or civil unrest, as well as disruptions in service due to loss of data, which could be caused by hacking, ransomware attacks, or even accidental deletion of items from the network.
A disaster can negatively affect your finances, causing lost revenue while your business or its data are offline. Disasters can also damage your reputation if you take too long to get back up and running.
Incorporate the use of a mass storage cloud into your disaster recovery strategy and create a plan for how to backup and recover vital information should a crisis occur.
Although you can't predict what disasters will hit or when, you can still put a plan in place to deal with the aftermath.
A disaster recovery plan outlines how you'll restore your operations and be back in business. Businesses specifically structure their disaster recovery plans to protect vital sets of data or software needed to resume important day-to-day operations. The goal is to minimise disruption to components of the business that might negatively impact revenue, sales or customer service.
There are many factors to consider when building your disaster recovery plan. One might ask:
Companies can collect all this information and put it in a formal plan to bring everything online as soon as possible.
Companies can outsource the creation of an effective disaster recovery plan as a means of getting started.
Third-party hosting options work with organisations to put a plan together and take a role in implementing it when a disaster takes place. This includes making sure all data is organised, replicated, and able to be moved properly upon request.
Utilising a disaster-recovery-as-a-service (DRaaS) solution also allows companies to stay connected from anywhere, which can be useful if a physical location is unsafe or unavailable, since data kept in the cloud will remain intact.
Businesses can seek out backup and recovery cloud solutions that can partner with a variety of companies specialising in storage and protection, like Commvault and Veeam, to strengthen their overall recovery plan. This opportunity adds more capabilities to a company’s disaster plan.
The increase of cloud options, as well as lower prices in the past few years, has allowed more companies to explore different options for these services. While some companies enjoy the potentially unlimited storage options available with cloud services and use these services for all data backup purposes, some still rely on traditional disaster recovery methods to plan for and manage data loss that may occur at their on-premises data centre or their company-managed private cloud. Either option has advantages, depending on your company’s size and footprint.
Traditional disaster recovery can include restoring or repairing damaged systems, often with physical backups. This keeps everything under local control.
This method of disaster recovery includes a physical onsite collection of a company’s data and its associated external hardware. Depending on the size of your company, you may have to invest funds and resources into building this onsite structure. Additionally, you will need to invest in keeping this structure continually maintained, updated and looked after. Overall, it can be a costly and time-consuming process.
The short answer is time and money. Compared to cloud disaster recovery, which can be done in seconds, traditional disaster recovery may take several hours to get everything reloaded, rebooted and tested. A company may also not have necessary expertise in house to guide the recovery process. Companies that maintain backup locations or emergency offsite recovery centres may also pay for power and space. They run the risk of these centres being affected if there's a larger disaster in a local community, further delaying time to come back online.
Cloud computing backups can make disaster recovery fairly simple. The process can involve creating duplicate virtual machines of a client's servers. These are kept online and refreshed regularly. When a disaster happens, a company just needs to initiate its disaster recovery plan to begin the process of restoring its data to these servers and services.
This can minimise data loss and get the company operating quickly. The disaster recovery plan may require waiting to bring lower-priority components online until after implementing critical items, but focusing on activating the most crucial data and services first is a good starting place to ensure essential operations can recover more quickly.
This method can involve beginning the recovery process from any location rather than only from a specific physical location.
A disaster recovery plan outlines how systems can come back online, whether you contact your cloud provider or begin to load backups yourself. It also outlines what departments are responsible for implementing certain tasks.
This plan can be a blueprint for a company to follow, with some decisions already made and relationships established with various vendors.
The alternative could be chaos, with different managers competing to figure out how to get things back online and no one having a lot of guidance. Accounts may need to be re-established and set up with vendors, which in some cases may incur additional costs or result in uncertain timelines.
A disaster recovery plan is intended to be dynamic and flexible. This means it shouldn't be created and filed away like safety manuals. It should be refreshed regularly, perhaps annually, to ensure the most current processes are put back in place and the most current IT vendors and partners are brought back online.
Hard and digital copies of the plan should be maintained and made available.
An effective disaster recovery plan can be created by: