Business Continuity

Does your company have any disaster recovery plan? Does this sound familiar and that’s a scary question. We believed you have spend a lot of times getting business started and then successfully running.
Why aren’t you betting against your business for keep it running?
Business Continuity Planning (BCP) is a methodology used to create a plan for how an organization will resume partially or completely interrupted critical function(s) within a predetermined time after a disaster or disruption.
Risk Assessment is one of the key components of disaster recovery planning. In order to create the most effective plan for recovering after a calamity, an organization must first consider what the potential disasters are that they could feasibly encounter, and how each of these might impact their business continuity.
The 2 most common metrics used to evaluate disaster recovery solutions are Recovery Time Objective (RTO) and Recovery Point Objective (RPO), but a third metric, Test Time Objective (TTO), is also emerging as another key measurement of the effectiveness of recovery alternatives.
Recovery Time Objective (RTO) measures the amount of time a computer system or application can stop functioning before it is considered intolerable to the business or organization. RTO can be determined to be from seconds to days, depending on how critical a given workload is to the organization. RTO is used to determine the type of backup and disaster recovery plans and processes that should be implemented to protect a specific workload.
Recovery Point Objective (RPO) Recovery point objective describes a point in time to which data must be restored in order to be acceptable to the owner(s) of the processes supported by that data. This is often thought of as the time between the last available backup and the time a disruption could potentially occur. Repre-senting the nearest historical point in time to which a workload can be recovered, RPO is a measure of data loss. The RPO is estab-lished for a given workload based on the organization’s degree of tolerance for loss of data or manual rekeying of data.
Test Time Objective (TTO) measures the time and effort required to test a disaster recovery plan to ensure its effectiveness. For an organization to be confident in their recovery strategy, solutions and methodology, the recovery infrastructure must be thoroughly and regularly tested. Routine testing should relatively easy, quick to implement and non-disruptive to business operations.
Our Solutions:
- Disaster Recovery Design, Planning, Strategy and Implementation.
- Business Impact and Risk Analysis.
- High Availability & Cluster.
- Data Protection & Recovery.
- Contingency Audit & Plan Assurance

