+1, 

 

Simon has hit the mark on this..

 

Only thing I can add is the DR plan is not the BCP plan. But BCP drives
DR Planning, and should have been completed well before DR planning is
started. 

 

Again what can the business tolerate in downtime before they are out of
business. For some its hours, others days, and even others minutes. 

 

Z

 

Edward Ziots

CISSP,MCSA,MCP+I,Security +,Network +,CCA

Network Engineer

Lifespan Organization

401-639-3505

[email protected]

 

From: Simon Butler [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, June 24, 2010 3:20 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: DR Plan

 

DR plans is something I hear about a lot, but I am of the opinion that
IT are the wrong people to drive this. 

DR should be part of the business, and the business needs to tell IT
what they need. 

IT cannot make the decision on what is and is not important. Do you know
how much downtime you can tolerate as a business? 

 

However the starting point I always make is the same. It is a DR plan of
sorts, one that is already in place and that most staff will know at
least the basics of. It is something that many overlook. 

 

Simply, what do you do in the event of a power failure?

 

That will give you a good grounding as to what sort of things have to be
considered. If the business has justified the outlay for a UPS that
requires its own room and a generator the size of a small van in the car
park, then you may have an idea of the kind of business continuity that
may well be required. 

 

You then look at the location. What I would have in a plan for a company
in the centre of London is very different to what I would have in the
Scottish mountains. 

 

Although the fact that many people in IT don't know where to start is a
good thing, because that means their business haven't made the decisions
and it needs to be pushed back to them. For some reason it is thought
that DR is just about IT, but it isn't. IT is just the facilitator.  In
effect, the business is their client and as such their business needs to
make the decisions. Only then can IT turn round and say "we can do that,
but it will cost you X", and it is seen as part of the overall business
continuity, which will need to involve telephones, buildings, access
etc. 

 

Although the best DR plan I have ever seen was summed up in two words -
Go Home. 
They were located in central London, inside the former terrorist road
block area. As such their entire IT environment was configured so that
the business continuity plan didn't have to be activated, it was already
in progress. Staff simply had to relocate. As long as they had the
internet, they could operate - all Citrix based with the servers outside
of London in a secure Data Centre called The Bunker. The company would
only lose printers, but even that was managed, with everything going
through an interim system for printing, so if the printers were not
available the jobs queued indefinitely for printing later. 

 

Simon.

 

 

--
Simon Butler
MVP: Exchange, MCSE
Sembee Ltd.

e: [email protected]
w: http://www.sembee.co.uk/
w: http://www.amset.info/

w: http://blog.sembee.co.uk/

Need cheap certificates for Exchange, compatible with Windows Mobile
5.0?
http://CertificatesForExchange.com/ for certificates from just $23.99.
Need a domain for your certificate? http://DomainsForExchange.net/ 

 

Exchange Resources: http://exbpa.com/ 

 

 

 

From: John Aldrich [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: 24 June 2010 19:01
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: DR Plan

 

Let me know what you find. We have a D/R plan, of sorts, but I think
it's woefully inadequate, but like you, I don't really know where to
start.

 

  

 

From: Jay Dale [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, June 24, 2010 11:23 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: DR Plan

 

Hey all,

 

I've been assigned to create a DR plan for our company, but I've never
actually had to come up with one before.  Does anyone have any ideas,
templates, examples, or sites that can help me with this?  Basically it
needs to cover our current infrastructure, if we purchase a SAN in the
future, and if we change our existing backup strategy from a local
backup to an offsite replication backup.

 

Thanks!

 

Jay Dale

I.T. Manager, 3GiG

Mobile: 713.299.2541

Email: [email protected]

 

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