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Disaster Recovery — Modernized Best Practices for JD Edwards & Beyond

Disaster Recovery — Modernized Best Practices for JD Edwards & Beyond. Presented by Andy Chase & Paul Shearer December 4, 2013. Introduction to Paul Shearer. Solution Architect 15 years JD Edwards experience Managed E1 Practice for Fortune 50 company

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Disaster Recovery — Modernized Best Practices for JD Edwards & Beyond

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  1. Disaster Recovery—Modernized Best Practices for JD Edwards & Beyond Presented by Andy Chase & Paul ShearerDecember 4, 2013

  2. Introduction to Paul Shearer • Solution Architect • 15 years JD Edwards experience • Managed E1 Practice for Fortune 50 company • Designed & Implemented HA solutions for multiple clients • Designed and implementation of DR solutions for multiple clients • Successfully completed multiple E1 upgrade projects • Recovered 12 customers in DR exercises • Published two technical whitepapers with Microsoft on ERP virtualization and Platform conversions

  3. Introduction to Andy Chase • Disaster Recovery AE & SME • Began disaster recovery career at the age of 13 and has worked with over 100 companies since 2001 to improve their recovery capabilities

  4. What constitutes a disaster? flood supply chain disruption epidemic/pandemic fire terroristevent cyberattack hurricane tornado utilityoutage sabotage ITfailure tsunami severeweather health & safety incident haz mat explosion poweroutage environmentalaccident telecommunicationsfailure earthquake

  5. What constitutes a disaster? flood supply chain disruption epidemic/pandemic fire terroristevent cyberattack hurricane tornado utilityoutage sabotage ITfailure tsunami severeweather health & safety incident haz mat explosion poweroutage environmentalaccident telecommunicationsfailure earthquake

  6. Most Disaster Recovery Discussions Begin Here Seconds How much data can you afford to lose? Tape Backup Recovery Point Objective (RPO) Tape Backup How much downtime can you afford to have? Days Recovery Time Objective (RTO) Weeks Minutes

  7. Most Disaster Recovery Discussions Begin Here Seconds How much data can you afford to lose? Data Vaulting Recovery Point Objective (RPO) How much downtime can you afford to have? NO DR RPO: ? RTO: ? Days Weeks Minutes Recovery Time Objective (RTO)

  8. Most Disaster Recovery Discussions Begin Here Seconds How much data can you afford to lose? Data Vaulting Recovery Point Objective (RPO) Tape Backup How much downtime can you afford to have? RPO: 24 hours RTO: 48 hours NO DR RPO: ? RTO: ? Days Weeks Minutes Recovery Time Objective (RTO)

  9. Most Disaster Recovery Discussions Begin Here Seconds How much data can you afford to lose? Data Vaulting ElectronicBackup Recovery Point Objective (RPO) Tape Backup RPO: 24 hours RTO: 24 hours How much downtime can you afford to have? RPO: 24 hours RTO: 48 hours NO DR RPO: ? RTO: ? Days Weeks Minutes Recovery Time Objective (RTO)

  10. Most Disaster Recovery Discussions Begin Here Seconds How much data can you afford to lose? Data Vaulting Transaction Vaulting RPO: 60 minutes RTO: <= 12 hours ElectronicBackup Recovery Point Objective (RPO) Tape Backup RPO: 24 hours RTO: 24 hours How much downtime can you afford to have? RPO: 24 hours RTO: 48 hours NO DR RPO: ? RTO: ? Days Weeks Minutes Recovery Time Objective (RTO)

  11. Most Disaster Recovery Discussions Begin Here Seconds How much data can you afford to lose? High Availability RPO: last successful transaction RTO: <= 2 hours Data Vaulting TransactionVaulting RPO: 60 minutes RTO: <= 12 hours ElectronicBackup Recovery Point Objective (RPO) Tape Backup RPO: 24 hours RTO: 24 hours How much downtime can you afford to have? RPO: 24 hours RTO: 48 hours NO DR RPO: ? RTO: ? Days Weeks Minutes Recovery Time Objective (RTO)

  12. Most Disaster Recovery Discussions Begin Here Seconds How much data can you afford to lose? High Availability RPO: last successful transaction RTO: <= 2 hours Data Vaulting Transaction Vaulting This is inherently broken! RPO: 60 minutes RTO: <= 12 hours ElectronicBackup Recovery Point Objective (RPO) Tape Backup RPO: 24 hours RTO: 24 hours How much downtime can you afford to have? RPO: 24 hours RTO: 48 hours NO DR RPO: ? RTO: ? Days Weeks Minutes Recovery Time Objective (RTO)

  13. Disaster Recovery “Benchmark” Data • 10* Volunteers & 2 Questions • Out of one thousand attendees at Collaborate, if the Keynote speaker asked… • How many organizations have already invested in disaster recovery software, infrastructure or services? • What percentage of you are completely confident that your team could recover those applications & data in the event of a disaster?

  14. You are not alone… 8% of federal IT executives are completely confident that their agency could recover 100 percent of its data in the event of a disaster

  15. You are not alone… 72% of recently surveyed enterprises were given either a D or an F for their DR capabilities.

  16. You are not alone… 93% of businesses that suffer a significant loss of data are out of business within 5 years.

  17. You are not alone… 43% of companies that suffer major data loss never reopen for business.

  18. “If I were a CIO…” • “I would tear up my DR plan & cease spending on DR completely.” • Why invest toward something that only works 10-27% of the time? • Better odds in Vegas!

  19. What do these numbers reveal about DR? and Proven Recoverability. There is a GAP between Disaster Recovery

  20. Why the gap? • “DR Team” already has full-time job • Production support always trumps DR • There will always be production issues to resolve • Lack of executive sponsorship • Lack of testing • Testing is not practical • Business can’t or won’t engage • Testing not complete • Too much time since last test • Plan not up to date • Too many changes to Production • Not a business priority • Not perceived as important • Lack of skills, understanding, funding, etc. • Uncertainty of staff availability in actual regional disaster event

  21. Why are most DR discussion inherently broken? Seconds How much data can you afford to lose? High Availability RPO: last successful transaction RTO: <= 2 hours Data Vaulting Transaction Vaulting They Assume Recoverability! RPO: 60 minutes RTO: <= 12 hours ElectronicBackup Recovery Point Objective (RPO) Tape Backup RPO: 24 hours RTO: 24 hours How much downtime can you afford to have? RPO: 24 hours RTO: 48 hours NO DR RPO: ? RTO: ? Days Weeks Minutes Recovery Time Objective (RTO)

  22. How can we permanently change the way our organization approaches disaster recovery? • Scratch out Disaster Recovery, write Recoverability • Disaster RecoveryRecoverability Plan • Disaster RecoveryRecoverability Spending • Disaster RecoveryRecoverability Solution • Disaster RecoveryRecoverabilityProjects

  23. How can we permanently change the way our organization approaches disaster recovery? • Scratch out Disaster Recovery, write Recoverability • Define Recoverability

  24. The Velocity definition of Recoverability The Power to Recover Your Business Applications & Data

  25. How can we permanently change the way our organization approaches disaster recovery? • Scratch out Disaster Recovery, write Recoverability • Define Recoverability • Does Recoverability Matter?

  26. Does Recoverability Matter? • Jewelry maker hasn’t tested DR in almost 5 years • 3rd party DR contract $50k/year • $250k spent without a Recoverability ROI • University cancels annual DR Test due to budget cuts • Test estimated to cost $10k T&E • 3rd party DR contract over $130,000/year • Many companies place old infrastructure in DR facility • “The business will understand if we have a disaster” • Will they? For some, maybe yes. • Boston CIO blog after terrorist attack • Communications Provider learns from Boston CIO

  27. Does Recoverability Matter? • Most would say yes, but results reveal otherwise… (GAP between Disaster Recovery & Recoverability is not new) • Did you know? • SOX, HIPAA, PCI, FERPA do not require Recoverability (at least Not Yet) • The Disaster Recovery Check Box vs. Proven Recoverability • How many CXOs are aware that their companies compliance with SOX, HIPPA, etc does not actually mean they are Recoverable?

  28. When does Recoverability matter? • Dallas construction materials company • No DR, tape backups only, JDE & WMS highly integrated • 3 locations: • Dallas HQs, Call Center, Distribution & Data Center • California Distribution Center • Maryland Distribution Center • CFO requests 3 site real-time replication What changed? • CEO finally cares about Recoverabilityafter capturing cell phone camera footage of tornado forming across parking lot!

  29. When does Recoverability matter? • Northeast retail chain • Internal DR @ secondary site, using Mimix HA • Company funded & implemented DR several years ago • Everything is current, tested & documented • CIO now wants to outsource DR to the Cloud What changed? • DR facility too close, told by insurance provider they will lose coverage if they don’t move DR site outside region

  30. How can we permanently change the way our organization approaches disaster recovery? • Scratch out Disaster Recovery, write Recoverability • Define Recoverability • Does Recoverability Matter? • What would it take to Prove Recoverability?

  31. What would it take to be completely confident that you could recover all your applications & data in the event of a disaster?

  32. What would it take to Prove Recoverability? • Plan it – Define all components required (create a matrix) • Build it – Implement all the pieces to the puzzle • Test it – Keep testing all pieces until you get it right • Prove it – Testing that includes business users & processes • Maintain it – Keep yourself Recoverable at ALLtimes • Guard it – Eliminate every potential single point of failure • The goal is for everyone in your business to be completely confident you are Recoverable!

  33. How can we permanently change the way our organization approaches disaster recovery? • Scratch out Disaster Recovery, write Recoverability • Define Recoverability • Does Recoverability Matter? • What would it take to Prove Recoverability? • Eliminate single points of failure

  34. Single Points of Failure in Disaster Recovery • Not enough DR capacity to run Production • Recovery facility in same FEMA region • Recovery team in same region as Production • Production team responsible for recovery • Recovery depends on “one” person • DR “team” lacks application expertise • JD Edwards/Technical Application Expertise • E1, Dev, Web, JAS, 3rd party tools, etc • Out of date recovery plan, untested plan • Incomplete testing, unsuccessful or infrequent testing • DR is an IT exercise rather than Business Process Validation

  35. DR is not that hard… • Billy Beane: We want you at first base. • Scott Hatteberg: But, I've always played catcher. • Billy Beane: It's not that hard, Scott. tell him, Wash. • Ron Washington: It's Incredibly hard.

  36. Disaster Recovery vs. Proven Recoverability • Think, Invest & Make Decisions toward Recoverability • (not toward disaster recovery, where there is no assurance)

  37. How can we permanently change the way our organization approaches disaster recovery? • Scratch out Disaster Recovery, write Recoverability • Define Recoverability • Does Recoverability Matter? • What would it take to Prove Recoverability? • Eliminate single points of failure • Think, Invest & Make Decisions toward Recoverability • (not toward disaster recovery, where there is no assurance)

  38. Common Disaster Recovery Configurations Seconds How much data can you afford to lose? High Availability RPO: last successful transaction RTO: <= 2 hours Data Vaulting RPO: 60 minutes RTO: <= 12 hours ElectronicBackup Recovery Point Objective (RPO) Tape Backup RPO: 24 hours RTO: 24 hours No DR How much downtime can you afford to have? RPO: 24 hours RTO: 48 hours NO DR RPO: ? RTO: ? Days Weeks Minutes Recovery Time Objective (RTO)

  39. Key Takeaways from Today

  40. Key Takeaways from Today How do we embed Recoverability into our organization’s culture?

  41. Get your life back. One size does not fit all. No boundaries. Questions? Control your Business. Go when you’re ready. Velocity Technology Solutions

  42. April 7-11, 2014 The Venetian and Sands Expo Center Las Vegas, Nevada QuestDirect.org/COLLABORATE Attend COLLABORATE 14 to hear high-level, strategic education for the JD Edwards audience. Register through Quest to receive exclusive JD Edwards updates, materials and networking events. Registration OPEN! Early Bird rates end February 12, 2014.

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