R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
Jargon Buster

ADVERTISEMENT

Half of UK firms lax on disaster recovery

Many UK companies ill-equipped to handle major disruption

Guy Dixon, vnunet.com 19 Oct 2007
ADVERTISEMENT

An encouraging 91 per cent of UK organisations carry out full evaluations of their disaster recovery plans, but almost half of the tests fail, according to a new survey.
The study by Symantec revealed that, although companies combine relevant staff, processes and technologies, around half would be found wanting when faced by natural disasters, computer system failures and external computer threats.

The survey also revealed that disaster recovery planning is still being neglected at the most senior level.

Just over three quarters of chief executives fail to take an active role on disaster planning committees, despite rigorous legal requirements and severe fines if something goes wrong.

A mere 40 per cent of IT professionals carried out a probability and impact assessment for all recognised threats, and a worrying 12 per cent failed to carry out an assessment for any threat.

"IT executives are taking a fresh, hard look at their disaster recovery and business continuity strategies," said Guy Bunker, chief scientist at Symantec.

"To protect against downtime, organisations must implement high availability and disaster recovery across their enterprise environments."

Bunker warned that firms must also maintain procedures for non-disruptive disaster recovery testing to continually evaluate the effectiveness of their plans without impacting the day-to-day environment.

Configuration change management was the least assessed threat area, with only 42 per cent of those feeling exposed to the threat actually carrying out an impact assessment for it.

See also:

Some 90 per cent not sufficiently protecting data  15 Oct 2007
Little encryption and poor disaster recovery plans  12 Oct 2007
40 per cent of attempted recoveries do not restore all information  04 Oct 2007
Vendors argue that companies need to manage data more efficiently  04 Oct 2007
IBMCrisis management equipment to restore IT systems  21 Mar 2007

All IT Management

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
London, United Kingdom | National Policing Improvement Agency
The NPIA, National Policing Improvement Agency, works for the police service and directly supports forces to deliver improvements today, and into the future. We're a single national support agency led by the police, for the ... more >
Central London, United Kingdom | MI5 Security Service
Communications Centre Engineer - Competitive salaries + excellent benefits - Central London Getting the best out of technology is critical to helping us protect the UK. Join MI5 and use your skills and experience to ... more >
London, United Kingdom | Feltham City Learning Centre
ICT Systems Administrator - Feltham City Learning Centre - £23,097 - £24,528 A full time ICT Systems Administrator to work in the Feltham City Learning Centre. This role requires a broad range of ICT skills ... more >
London, United Kingdom | Deloitte
Technology and Systems Consulting Event - LondonWith the right balance, you'll achieve great things. Join our Consulting practice and have the opportunity to balance your technical and business consulting skills to bring out the best ... more >
More job opportunities