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| Home > CIO Midmarket Briefings > Disaster recovery planning guide > Tools and technology: Keep your information secure > New offerings that may cut the cost of your IT disaster recovery plan | |
| Briefings: Disaster recovery planning guide: |
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Tools and technology: Keep your information secure
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For businesses that have outsourced DR to big providers, there are now subscription-based solutions for backup, storage, replication and application continuity offered through the cloud or as Software as a Service applications. These cloud computing offerings promise fast recovery without big up-front investment. Here are Balaouras' arguments for both scenarios. In-house DR on the cheap: Virtualization, software-based replication Disaster recovery tends to get short shrift at midmarket companies -- and with good reason, Balaouras says. Disk-based replication is expensive, requiring like-to-like systems at the primary and backup sites as well as plenty of bandwidth. In addition to the investment in the two storage arrays, the license fees can run in the tens of thousands of dollars. Even large companies tend to reserve this for their mission-critical systems, Balaouras said. Companies that intend to keep doing DR internally should leverage virtualization, as well as a range of new replication technologies, as much as possible. "If you have 10 physical servers at your production site, you don't have to have 10 physical servers at the recovery site; you could have less," she said. In addition to cutting the cost of hardware, virtualization reduces the square footage of the recovery site, whether that is leased space from a colocation provider or one's own. Software-based replication, where software is used to make and send a copy of the data over a WAN or LAN to a local or distant backup server, is more flexible. "The benefit with software-based replication is that the technologies are completely agnostic to the storage. You could have storage, not have it, you could have direct-attached storage," Balaouras said. "You also can replicate from physical to virtual environments, another way to potentially save money." Balaouras said solutions that she likes in this category include those from Neverfail Ltd., CA XOsoft and Double-Take Software Inc. Software-based replication costs less up front and has lower ongoing operational costs, Balaouras said. A perpetual license for software-based replication typically costs $1,500 to $2,000 per protected server. Maintenance fees run 10% to 15% of the original cost. Rather than the optical connectivity required in many storage-based replication solutions, software-based replication solutions will replicate over IP, Balaouras said. Faster outsourced recovery at a lower price Small and medium-sized business that relied in the past on an IBM or a SunGard to recover their data from tape could expect to wait 48 to 72 hours to get back up and running, and that's not fast enough anymore, Balaouras said. Yet more advanced solutions with faster recovery times are much more expensive, costing millions of dollars a year. Enter Storage as a Service and other disaster recovery/business continuity services. "There was nothing in the middle, until now," Balaouras said. The growing acceptance of these on-demand services can be traced to consumer offerings such as the photo sharing site Flickr, said Jeffrey Kaplan, managing director of ThinkStrategies Inc. In Wellesley, Mass. "It was that consumer experience which popularized the concept of online storage and drove home the value of protecting professional records for many small and medium-sized businesses," Kaplan said. The online services automate functions that in the traditional mode (redundant systems, shipping tapes) required investment in infrastructure and time. With the proliferation of vendors offering such services, the midmarket CIO's most important task is to choose a reliable provider with the wherewithal to survive a dicey economy. "There are brand-name companies now in this business, including Dell, EMC and Digital Iron Mountain," Kaplan said. Balaouras recommends four ways to attain this DR by remote control:
Let us know what you think about the story; email: Linda Tucci, Senior News Writer
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