Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery: What Is it And Why Do I Need One?

Published On: 19th November 2020

Home / News / Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery: What Is it And Why Do I Need One?

2020 will have given many businesses a shift in mindset: sometimes the worst does happen. Be it a cyber attack or an earthquake, IT has a foolproof response. An IT disaster recovery plan and business continuity planning are designed to minimise damage to a business’s operations and bottom line. Whilst both achieve similar goals, they differ from each other a little. So, to avoid any confusion and help you choose the right solution for your business, here’s an overview of both.

 

What is disaster recovery?

If a business were to be hit by an incapacitating incident like a cyber attack or natural disaster, they’d turn to their disaster recovery plan (DR). It’s a carefully thought through playbook for such disasters, designed to restore a business’s functionality ASAP. Once Fusion’s disaster recovery specialists have taken ownership of the plan, there are several key ingredients to consider.

  • Assessment

Here our specialists will take stock of all potential hazards that could cause a disaster and what needs to be protected. Knowing both of these will help them draw up solutions to both protect against them and respond accordingly when they happen.

  • Backup

This is guided by two metrics: Recovery Point Objective (RPO) and Recovery Time Objective (RTO). RPO measures the maximum length of time/data lost that can be endured before suffering serious harm. RTO is the time required to restore data before serious harm is done. These two metrics will be the basis of choosing exactly what to back up and the strategy needed to do so.

  • Testing and optimisation

There’s little point having a DR plan if you’re not certain it works. Once the plan has been drawn up, the recovery team must run it against a range of ever-evolving threats within the IT landscape to make sure the plan is prepared for anything. For certain industries, testing can be mandatory by law.

  • Secondary location

A business’s primary location may become compromised after a disaster. So, for a disaster recovery plan to be reliable, it should designate a secondary site where a business can resume operations post disaster.

 

What is a business continuity plan and how does it differ from disaster recovery?

Disaster recovery

It’s broader. A disaster recovery plan falls within a business continuity plan. Meanwhile, a business continuity plan uses a range of strategies, often outside IT, to ensure business disruption is avoided. Issues addressed include:

  • How will a business communicate? Both with each other and the media?
  • Is there a PR strategy?
  • What equipment will be needed? Everything from IT equipment to warehouse hardware should be considered.
  • How should the employees respond? What should they do? And what should they avoid doing?

It’s important to have both a disaster recovery plan and a continuity plan in place. Think of it as an office not having a fire evacuation procedure. Failure to do so would be to sit back and just hope that nothing goes wrong.

 

How is backup different from both business continuity and disaster recovery?

Disaster recovery plan

Backups have longer RTOs and RPOs. This means they’re pretty ineffective in adequately restoring business-critical data after a disaster. Backup is better suited to restoring individual bits of data that get lost or corrupted. Or for archiving data that won’t need to be accessed quickly. Backup also won’t demand a secondary location like a disaster recovery plan does.

If you hadn’t considered the importance of a good disaster recovery or business continuity plan, now’s the time. As a next step, download our eBook here. It will go into further detail on the two solutions and give you further clarity on what’s right for your business.

Download Your Essential Guide to Business Continuity & Disaster Recovery

Published On: 19th November 2020/

Featured post

Dark web scanning from Fusion – casting light in the shadows

20th March 2024|

Since 2016, the number of dark web listings that could be harmful to businesses has increased by 20% which means that 60% of all listings are now potentially harmful to businesses. Millions of people unknowingly have their information exposed, putting them and the organisations they work for at risk of cybercrime.

Recent posts

Latest posts

Dark web scanning from Fusion – casting light in the shadows

20th March 2024|

Since 2016, the number of dark web listings that could be harmful to businesses has increased by 20% which means that 60% of all listings are now potentially harmful to businesses. Millions of people unknowingly have their information exposed, putting them and the organisations they work for at risk of cybercrime.

Fusion newsletter – November 2023

29th November 2023|

As we start the countdown to Christmas, the team at Fusion have been busier than Santa's elves, putting the final touches to several client installations and completing some internal projects of our own. In the final quarter of 2023, we have launched ‘Fusion Learn’, our new online training platform, upgraded...

Go to Top