2008 AT&T Business Continuity Study
Monday, June 9th, 2008One in Five U.S. Businesses does not have a plan to handle man-made and natural disasters.
Despite the reality of man-made and natural disasters, many businesses are not prepared to maintain business operations in the event of an emergency, according to an annual AT&T study on business continuity and disaster recovery preparedness for U.S. businesses.
Now in its seventh year, the AT&T Business Continuity Study found that one in five businesses does not have a business continuity plan in place. And for the third year in a row, the survey finds that nearly 30 percent of U.S. businesses don’t consider business continuity planning a priority.
We talked to IT executives from companies throughout the United States that have at least $25 million in annual revenue to get their views, and this is what we’ve learned:
- Two-thirds of IT executives predict that hacking will be the biggest threat in the next five years. The next most frequently mentioned threats are internal:
- Accidents — 56 percent
- Sabotage — 47 percent
- Remote workers — 44 percent
- Six out of 10 companies have made some type of business change in the past year, but only 28 percent updated their plans.
- One-fourth (28 percent) have insufficient storage space.
- The vast majority (79 percent) have special arrangements for communicating with key executives during a natural disaster.
We offer a wide array of business continuity services, encompassing disaster planning, risk management, recovery preparedness and communications readiness. AT&T Business Continuity Services are comprehensive, providing enterprises with business-impact analysis, risk assessments, a full continuum of storage solutions, high-availability network solutions and network and IT security solutions. And we’re practicing what we preach: We execute Network Disaster Recovery (NDR) exercises several times a year.
Throughout the past 10 years, AT&T has invested more than $500 million in its NDR program, which includes specially trained managers, engineers and technicians from across the United States, as well as a fleet of more than 150 self-contained equipment trailers and support vehicles that house the same equipment and components as an AT&T data-routing or voice-switching center.
- View the results of our 2007 AT&T Business Continuity Study
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