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Archive for March 18th, 2008

Maximizing IT Uptime When Disaster Strikes

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

When we think of disaster, we tend to think of fires, floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, and now terrorism. But an event does not need to be large-scale or catastrophic to qualify as a disaster. Human error, malicious behavior, and even the complexity of the systems themselves can bring about high-impact outages that affect your service levels and business operations. In order to build a resilient communications network that can survive any type of disaster, organizations must create a contingency plan that considers the people, hardware, operating and escalation plans, and, ultimately, the money to put it all together and keep it running.

Developing an Uptime Plan
Developing an uptime management plan provides organizations with a structured way to assess critical processes and threats, and to build a program of detection, notification, restoration, and recovery to implement when a disaster or major disruption occurs. 

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has produced a Contingency Planning Guide for Information Technology Systems which is an invaluable resource to help any organization with this goal. It outlines a seven-step approach:

>>>>>>>> Click Here to Read the Entire Article <<<<<<<<<<<

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Just as with the Y2K crisis of seven years ago, IT workers are being called upon to don superhero suits and save the enterprise from impending technology trouble. But this time, IT will be sifting through the complexities of the federal Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

Public Companies over 75 million already need to comply by 12/15/2007...

Will your SMB be Ready?


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