Case Studies
Disaster Recovery
29th June 2007
Disaster Recovery
What is Disaster Recovery?Disaster Recovery (DR) is a coordinated activity to enable the recovery of IT/business systems due to a disruption. DR (disaster recovery) can be achieved by restoring IT/business operations at an alternate location, recovering IT/business operations using alternate equipment, and/or performing some or all of the affected business processes using manual methods.
Why do I need Disaster Recovery?
Disaster recovery is not just for large organisations. Leading analysts have hard facts that point to two out of five businesses, of all sizes, that experience a disaster go out of business within five years of the event.
Many companies believe a 'disaster' is a once in a lifetime incident. In fact, these incidents are very common with growing numbers of viruses, security breaches, software issues, hardware failures and data corruption. Thankfully, more catastrophic events such as weather-related causes, fires, power interruptions and sabotage are exceptional, but the most successful companies, small or large, prepare themselves for all potential eventualities.
Consequences of a Disaster
* Loss of Business/customers
* Loss of Credibility/goodwill
* Cash flow problems
* Inability to pay staff
* Loss of production
* Loss of operational data
* Financial loss
90% of businesses that lose data from a disaster are forced to shut down within 2 years of the disaster. 50% of businesses experiencing a computer outage will be forced to shut within 5 years.
Source: London Chamber of Commerce
Disaster Recovery Statistics
20% of all companies will suffer fire, theft, flood or storm damage, power failures, terrorism or hardware/software disaster. Of those without a business continuity plan:
* 43% will never re-open
* 80% fail within 13 months
* 53% of claimants never recoup the losses incurred by a disaster
Source: Aveco
* Less than 50% of all organisations have a business continuity plan
* 43% of companies that do have a business continuity plan do not test it annually
* 80% of companies have not developed any crisis management to provide IT
coverage sufficient to keep the business functionally effectively
* 40% of companies that do have crisis management plans do not have a team dedicated to disaster recovery
Source: London Chamber of Commerce
Downtime Costs
What is the cost per hour of major systems downtime at your organisation?
Up to £1,000 23%
£1,000 - £5,000 16%
£5,000 - £10,000 11%
£10,000 - £20,000 7%
£20,000 - £50,000 3%
Above £50,000 15%
Not sure (don't know how to calculate) 25%
Source: Information Age
Want to know more?
To find out more about Disaster Recovery Solutions please contact one of our team: T:0870 774 2588 F:0870 774 2589 e:sales@drs.uk.com