On mySimon: Spiewak Durand Jacket
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Andy McCue
Posted on ZDNet News: Oct 17, 2003 5:56:00 PM

Employee blunders and hardware and software failures are more of a worry for IT directors than the much-hyped threat of terrorism when it comes to disaster recovery planning, according to a new survey.

Half of the 877 IT directors interviewed for the research cited human related issues--accidental errors and malicious behavior--as the main threat to the security of their business. Almost two-thirds also cited hardware failure, while 59 per cent said software failure and viruses are a significant threat.

But only a quarter said terrorism is a major concern, and natural disasters such as floods were hardly mentioned by respondents.

Lindsey Armstrong, senior VP for Europe at Veritas, said in a statement: "What is surprising about this research is the fact that despite the recent obsessive concern with the threat of international terrorism, technology related threats and potential human errors are still far more in the forefront of people's minds."

Of major concern almost a quarter admitted to not physically testing their disaster recovery plans at all and of those that do 37 per cent test only once a year. Yet 80 per cent said they had experienced unplanned downtime in the past year, with over a quarter suffering downtime on a quarterly basis or more. And 14 per cent had a system outage of between 24 and 48 hours, with 16 per cent of those suffering major data loss as a result.

Time, lack of budget and disruption to employees were the top three reasons given for not testing recovery plans.

IT departments are also putting their recovery plans at risk by not storing them securely in many cases. Seventy per cent keep the plans in their main data centre, which isn't much use if it burns down.

Only 20 per cent stored them away from the data center and only 15 per cent store them offsite at a secure third party location. An absent-minded 5 per cent admitted they had no idea where the plans are kept in the first place.

And despite the potential damage of a major failure, disaster recovery is being left to the IT departments to handle with the board taking little interest in the area. Responsibility is handed to the departmental IT manager in 56 per cent of cases and the divisional IT manager in 28 per cent of cases, while the CIO, CTO or IT director are responsible for disaster recovery in 22 per cent of cases.

Armstrong said: "Disaster recovery planning is fundamental to any organization that is serious about its survival. Putting the security of data solely on the shoulders of the IT department isn't enough. In order to make the right business decisions about where budgets are allocated, what level of risk is involved in each area of the business and have a proper understanding of what is at risk if downtime occurs, the board must get involved. Shareholder value depends on the security of the company's data."

The annual survey was carried out by Dynamic Markets for Veritas. The research was conducted in large organizations with over 500 staff in the United States, UK, France, Germany, Benelux, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, South Africa, Austria, Poland, the Middle East, and Italy.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 32 Talkback(s)
And you are a perfect engineer, I imagine?
Maybe in your private little Idaho, there are no incompetent users and every single faux pas is documented with audio and video proof, but here we have to go take care of it and move on without stoppi... (Read the rest)
Posted by: AbsolutelyNot Posted on: 10/23/03 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Scott Adams Worst Nightmare  Netizen Kane | 10/17/03
RE: Scott Adams Worst Nightmare  CooCooCaChoo | 10/17/03
title (there zdnet, freaking satisifed?)  blahblahblah | 10/18/03
RE: title (there zdnet, freaking satisifed?)  CooCooCaChoo | 10/18/03
hmm, ok  blahblahblah | 10/18/03
IT's biggest worries  ajapierce | 10/19/03
you work in support don't you -- LOL!!!  blahblahblah | 10/18/03
Sheesh...  BitTwiddler | 10/19/03
RE: Sheesh...  CooCooCaChoo | 10/20/03
Yep! I know those people!  AbsolutelyNot | 10/17/03
quit yer whinin  blahblahblah | 10/18/03
RE: quit yer whinin  CooCooCaChoo | 10/18/03
ok...and....  blahblahblah | 10/18/03
Don't agree with you  zd-spam | 10/19/03
I really hate these new talkbacks  Patrick Jones | 10/20/03
What are they doing?  lmaxwell | 10/17/03
Failures invented by incompetent IT staff  Michel Merlin | 10/17/03
yes! a sane voice speaks!  blahblahblah | 10/18/03
I heard an insane voice  zd-spam | 10/19/03
You heard it *in your own head*  Michel Merlin | 10/19/03
OH-you're a SOFTWARE developer...  AbsolutelyNot | 10/19/03
Excuse me?  AbsolutelyNot | 10/19/03
Proofs of your users' assumed stupidity?  Michel Merlin | 10/20/03
And you are a perfect engineer, I imagine?  AbsolutelyNot | 10/23/03
Specifics?  BitTwiddler | 10/19/03
Oh, jeez...  Yen_z | 10/20/03
Blunders  michael-t | 10/18/03
Garbage In, Garbage Out  SublimeDaze | 10/20/03
Sounds like a cry for thin clients  Len Rooney | 10/20/03
Requery of the IT Industry  jdwebwolf | 10/20/03
despite the recent obsessive concern with international terrorism  Tammee | 10/20/03
what really going on  penguin4u1987 | 10/21/03

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

Click Here