1 / 20

Technology Disaster Preparedness

Technology Disaster Preparedness. Moderator: Douglas Furst Technology Works for Good www.technologyworks.org First Speaker: Johan Hammerstrom Community IT Innovators (C.I.T.I.) www.citidc.com Second Speaker: Richard Feller Hedgehog Hosting www.hedgehoghosting.com.

Télécharger la présentation

Technology Disaster Preparedness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Technology Disaster Preparedness Moderator: Douglas Furst Technology Works for Good www.technologyworks.org First Speaker: Johan Hammerstrom Community IT Innovators (C.I.T.I.) www.citidc.com Second Speaker: Richard Feller Hedgehog Hosting www.hedgehoghosting.com

  2. Introduction • Technology Disaster Preparedness • Agenda • Before: • What can you do ahead of time? • Johan Hammerstrom, C.I.T.I. • After: • What do you do if something happens to you? • Richard Feller, Hedgehog Hosting • Q&A NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  3. Protect Your Organization,Protect Your Data • Disaster Preparedness is crucial for any business system • It’s not technology…it’s business policy (better yet, a written policy) • Effective policy requires sound business judgment, which means… NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  4. Risk Assessment • What is the Risk? • Determined by… • Likelihood of disaster • Impact of disaster • Identify your biggest threats (Likelihood) • Identify mission critical IT (Impact) NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  5. Create a Disaster Preparedness policy that meets your needs… • What is a Disaster? • Technology Problems • Personnel Problems • Facility Problems • Catastrophic Problems NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  6. Preventing the Disaster • More cost effective than recovery • Adopt a security mindset • “Confidentiality – Integrity – Availability” • Surface area • Defense-in-depth NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  7. Simple things make a big difference… • Password security • Disable former staff accounts • Proper backups including off-site rotation • Antivirus protection • Out of the Box ("OOB") Vulnerabilities • Protection from hackers • Physical security • Don’t forget social engineering • www.citidc.com/security NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  8. What should a disaster recovery plan include Disaster Recovery Committee NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  9. What should a disaster recovery plan include Disaster Recovery Committee • Personnel Continuance • Need of multiple locations • Provisions for needed resource phones/computing • Restoration of functionality to most critical people and projects first • On-site decision-making empowerment NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  10. What should a disaster recovery plan include • Disaster Recovery Committee • Personnel Continuance • Procedural Continuance • Look at possible scenarios • Develop methods to restore critical data and systems • Develop methods for resumptions of key business procedures • Frequent testing and updating of scenarios and methods • Other issues: (food, lodging, power, transportation) NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  11. What should a disaster recovery plan include • Disaster Recovery Committee • Personnel Continuance • Procedural Continuance • Technology Continuance • Computer backup and recovery • Possible outsourced hosting of data systems • Redundancy of data and voice communications links NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  12. What should a disaster recovery plan include • Disaster Recovery Committee • Personnel Continuance • Procedural Continuance • Technology Continuance • Contacts • Who • Leader • Vendor Resources • Managers • How • Include contact numbers • Include times • Include secondary options for contacts NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  13. What should a disaster recovery plan include • Disaster Recovery Committee • Personnel Continuance • Procedural Continuance • Technology Continuance • Contacts • Environment Specifications • Location • Type Quantity • Physical need or intellectual need NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  14. What should a disaster recovery plan include Disaster Recovery Committee Determine when a disaster will be more disastrous. NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  15. Backup and recovery options Cost is one of the biggest factors in any backup/recovery plan Cost and objective should be looked at simultaneously Usually implemented in larger hosting environments Can be used via third party Usually quite costly when implemented in-house Will speak about these more in the outsourcing / hosted portion

  16. Online Concerns Environment Bandwidth Security Control Costs Benefits Speedy implementation Low IT overhead Costs Decision time - Online or In-house • Factors to consider: • How much data are we talking about • How much of your IT staff can you spare • Where can you store data In-House • Concerns • Higher IT overhead • Equipment • Location (yours and others) • Costs • Benefits • Total Control • Can implement on your terms • Costs NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  17. In-house Options Online Options NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  18. Some post mortem conclusions • Customer Procedural Problems • Too narrow a focus • No automated means for tracking the location of tapes • No action plan by the customer • Lack of skilled resources from customer side • Inappropriate upper or executive management • No single document that describes the environment • Online data protection procedures were not in place • Summary of lessons learned • Consider working with professional DR consultants • Consider ALL of your software options for protection of servers, applications and tape media, in addition to data NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  19. Outsourcing / Hosted Solutions • Economy of scale • Best in class options • Misconception of costs • Empower IT staff • Focus on core business NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

  20. Q&A Johan Hammerstrom Richard Feller NTEN: Technology Disaster Preparedness

More Related