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| Home > Disaster recovery plans for remote, branch offices: A guide for CIOs | |
| Midmarket CIO Briefing: |
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From developing a strategic remote office disaster recovery plan to implementing and testing it, experts share their top do's and don'ts for a robust and efficient ROBO DR plan in this guide. How will an effective DR plan translate to remote sites? How much will a remote office disaster recovery plan cost? How will IT manage remote sites in the event of a disaster? What is the best remote office backup strategy for your business? Learn the answers to these questions and more in our guide covering disaster recovery plans for remote and branch offices. For free advice and resources on more IT and business topics, visit our list of Midmarket CIO Briefings. Table of contents
Let's face it: With the trouble CIOs have managing backup and restore at primary data centers, remote sites barely have a chance. Make the process as simple and straightforward as possible. Start by really thinking through what remote-site systems and data the business absolutely, positively needs.
After sorting the systems, focus on detailed documentation and testing for remote-site DR plans.
The problem with disaster recovery plans, Greg Folsom says, is not only anticipating all the things that can go wrong, but also paying for protection against them. "There is not enough money in the world to enable a medium-sized company to devote that much to DR," said Folsom, senior vice president of IT at Arnold Worldwide Partners, a Boston-based advertising firm. Well, certainly not enough money in the roughly $2 million annual IT budget at Folsom's disposal. But if Folsom's 12-person IT team cannot afford to cover every DR contingency, it does need to provide a strong safety net for Arnold, which does more than $100 million in revenue and employs more than 650 people in Boston and regional offices in New York and Washington, D.C. "We were hearing a lot of buzz around server virtualization and green data centers, or greener data centers. I wanted to get into all this stuff and I needed disaster recoverability," Folsom said. "I needed a flexible solution that could accommodate a variety of situations. I call it my Swiss Army knife of disaster recoverability." He combined a server virtualization effort with a virtualized storage area network (SAN) for a solution that he said gives back a lot more than DR.
There are several vendors that offer managed network services appliances for remote offices, which are often called Unified Threat Management (UTM). These products typically include a firewall, virtual private network (VPN) and intrusion detection features, along with antivirus screening tools and an assortment of other security measures. That covers a lot of ground, and this technical tip demonstrates what is involved in configuring and maintaining this type of protection using firewall/VPN appliances from Check Point Software Technologies, SonicWall and Fortinet. What the three products have in common is some form of managed network services offering, so they can update their features, antivirus signature files and patches without IT intervention. A monthly subscription fee is required for this service, but in turn there's no need to worry about maintaining these boxes.
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