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Telecom Disaster Planning - What You Need to Know to Get Started

Article Description:
====================

What if your company couldn't use its computers for a day?
How about your phones? Any phone system outage, even if
it's a short one, could result in financial losses and
inconvenience for your business. Can you afford this
disruption? Most businesses can't.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

780 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2009-08-05 11:24:00

Written By:     Nermine Shaker
Copyright:      2009
Contact Email:  mailto:[email protected]



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Telecom Disaster Planning - What You Need to Know to Get Started
Copyright (c) 2009 Nermine Shaker
The Sygnal Group
http://www.SygnalGroup.com



What if your company couldn't use its computers for a day? How
about your phones? Any phone system outage, even if it's a short
one, could result in financial losses and inconvenience for your
business. Can you afford this disruption? Most businesses can't.

Planning for any type of interruption in your telephone or data
service should be a critical issue for any business.
Unfortunately, however, most businesses only realize its
importance after the fact - after an outage has occurred. Many
adverse effects of interruption of service could be minimized or
even eliminated with some advanced planning.

Your business should be prepared for the following events: a
power outage, network failure, phones system failure, a disaster
affecting your workplace or a disaster affecting your region.
During most previous disasters, the phones would still work. With
the emergence of telecom systems that are powered by local
electricity, without power, communications are shut down. Your
customers can't place orders and your business grinds to a halt.
Restoring your telecom service then, is essential to restoring
your business. Companies that have a telecom disaster plan are
better prepared for any outage for whatever reason.

In the past, disaster planning was usually expensive and cost
prohibitive to most companies. With today's technology, there
are cost-effective options for even the smallest telecom budget.

What Your Plan Should Do

Your plan can be anything from a written plan on how to re-route
your telecom services, to purchasing automatic routing
arrangements with a carrier. The plan should define a procedure
that will bring back your resources as fast as possible. It
should also require redundancy in components and systems to
provide continuous operation.

Understand Your Services

When you are designing your disaster recovery plan, you first
need to understand all of your services, the value they provide
your company and what the impact would be if that service was
gone for a period of time. You also need to look at which parts
of your services might be likely to fail and how that failing
will compromise your business and its connectivity.

Redundancy plays a huge part in disaster planning. A common myth
is that all you need to do is have a different circuit from a
different vendor. This doesn't guarantee redundancy. You have to
ensure that you have two completely different circuits with
absolutely no shared facilities and being fed by different
central offices.

Here Are Some Steps to Get You Started

 * Take the time to consider what the worst-case scenario would
be and plan for it. If you have prepared for the worst case,
lesser emergencies will be taken care of as well.

 * Define everyone's roles and responsibilities and make sure
they know what they are responsible for.

 * Back up your data. Important daily output should be backed up
and documented. Ideally, one back-up copy can be kept on site and
another off-site.

 * Establish a plan for your communications and review these
plans with all of your service providers.

 * Select an alternate IT location in advance. This may mean a
different building, city or state, depending on the severity of
the disaster for which you are planning.

 * Document your plan in writing and share it with your employees
so they know the procedures you're putting in place. Educate
your employees to make sure everyone knows the procedures to
follow during an emergency. Make sure all critical names and
contact information are included in your document.

 * Review your plan quarterly and make sure contact information
is always up to date.

Specifically for telecom, here are some points to consider that
will reduce the chance of telecom failure and give you a faster
recovery from disasters.

 * Do you have an Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) in place? Is
it adequate for your business and for a reasonable amount of
time?

 * Do you have a current data backup of your PBX system?

 * Do you have back up lines if your T1 or PRI goes down?

 * Do you have redundant hardware (hard drives and power
supplies) if they fail?

 * If your system fails, are your incoming calls automatically
re-routed to another number?

 * Do you have all your data, documentation, licensing codes and
passwords backed up and in a safe place?

Disaster planning can end up being more valuable than any other
IT project. Disaster recovery strategies are different for every
company because every company has different priorities. It's
important to note that it's never too late to start building and
implementing your telecom disaster recovery plan. No one wants a
disaster and no one wants to plan for it. However, a Disaster
Recovery Plan will protect your business and prevent total loss
during an emergency, whether big or small.






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Nermine Shaker is a Partner at THE SYGNAL GROUP, a telecom 
consulting firm that offers telecom expense management, 
telecom auditing and VoIP management to businesses of 
all sizes.  Find out how to lower your telecom expenses 
at http://www.SygnalGroup.com/ or visit our blog at 
http://www.TelecomExpertise.com/


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