Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
Documente Cultură
a Disaster
7 Cost-Saving Tips for
Disaster Recovery
A natural or human-made
disaster can strike at any time.
If your organization isnt prepared, the cost of business
disruption can be enormous. Because no organization
can afford downtime, developing a disaster recovery
plan is imperative.
Its somewhat inaccurate to say that an organization wants to
avoid downtime at all costs. However, according to the Disaster
Recovery Preparedness Councils 2014 Annual Report, 60% of
companies dont have a full disaster recovery plan in place. Clearly,
there is a limit to what an organization will pay to ensure uptime.
With 20% of the companies surveyed indicating post incident
60%
20%
1
Avoid Application Downtime
When businesses cant access missioncritical applications or information, their
operations are disrupted. And when
a firm cant operate, it loses profit. Its
reputation suffers, and clients turn to
the competition.
$1.25-2.5
billion
1
Avoiding downtime will save your
business money in the long term
Your disaster recovery solution should
enable you to prevent the expense of
downtime. Look for solutions that:
Offer continuous availability of disaster recovery software
through array-based clustering and synchronous mirroring that
duplicates all your mission-critical data on a transaction-bytransaction basis.
Provide disk-failure protection technology that is double-parity
and that prevents data loss even when two Disaster Recoveries
fail.
Use data replication software that creates recovery point
objectives ranging from minutes to hours and that protects your
data from mirrored data corruption by failing over to a specific
point in time in the Disaster Recovery copy.
Create point-in-time data and application copies that you can use
to protect datafrom a single file to a complete disaster recovery
solution.
2
Use Cost-Effective Infrastructure
$150,000
"Implementing a cloud-based
disaster recovery plan would save
my company $150,000"
3
Reduce Network Bandwidth
and Storage Consumption
After your company has chosen a cloud-based disaster
recovery solution, some of the largest costs are network
bandwidth and storage consumption
Following are three ways to save money on network bandwidth and storage consumption:
Data compression
An affordable cloud Disaster Recovery solution should allow data compression. Look for a solution
that can compress your data by about 70% or more, which allows you to fit more data, systems, and
applications into a smaller space.
Deduplication
In most storage systems, data often consists of duplicate information that consumes a lot of space in
all storage tiers. Instead, a cost-saving storage solution looks at your data to find duplicate data that
does not need to be saved over and over again. The solution should then combine the duplicated data
to free up space.
Data transfer
Often overlooked, bandwidth costs for connecting your on-premises environment to the cloud
contribute to the overall price of a Disaster Recovery solution. For many solutions, the entire system
is replicated daily or hourly, regardless of the changes that are made to the system from the previous
backup. Look for a Disaster Recovery system that replicates only files, applications, and systems that
have been changed since the last transfer. This step can reduce bandwidth requirements by up to 90%.
4
Support Issue
Troubleshooting
A cost-effective Disaster Recovery solution also provides a
safe environment that supports issue troubleshooting and
new product development and testing while maintaining
business continuity.
To save money, look for a Disaster Recovery solution that:
Has the ability to develop and test applications faster by creating instant, space-efficient data
replicas that shorten design cycles and improve service levels.
Can replicate data volumes and datasets by using space-saving virtual clones. These clones can
be used for essential enterprise operations such as testing and bug fixing, platform and upgrade
checks, multiple simulations using large datasets, and more.
Leverages your disaster recovery infrastructure to perform failover testing without downtime.
Failover testing is crucial, because it determines whether a standby system is ready to handle
tasks to support business continuity during a disaster.
Offers simplified Disaster Recovery testing through checks and balances that automatically
check the efficiency of your disaster recovery system.
5
Avoid Fines by Meeting
Regulatory Compliance
Standards
A disaster recovery plan can actually save your business money.
Many governments have passed legislation that mandates
organizations to back up their data and applications in the event
of an emergency. If law enforcement officials discover that youre
in violation of these laws, your company could face heavy fines
and be forced to purchase new equipment for Disaster Recovery
planning.
SAVE
Money
6
Unify Storage
Simplifying your Disaster Recovery storage with a common set of
software and tools is highly cost-effective. It saves your IT team
the frustration, time, and cost of figuring out how to integrate your
companys flash, disk, and cloud into a single data management
foundation. Your Disaster Recovery solution should provide data
unification even in a hybrid cloud environment by using consistent
processes, features, and data management tools everywhere.
7
Effectively Scale Your Disaster
Recovery Solution
The ability to scale a solution is important. It means that the solution continues to function well when
it changes in size or volume to meet user needs. Some IT decision makers believe that overscaling is
the best approach to being able to meet business needs. This approach isnt cost-effective, though.
Instead, it costs your firm more money, because youre paying for resources that youre not currently
consuming. Cloud-based infrastructure is all about flexibility and efficiency. It allows you to deploy
new services or run applications with varying usage needsand to pay for what you need, when you
need it. You will pay only for the storage that you use, as opposed to spending money on something
thats simply going to waste.
10
Learn more at
www.netapponcloud.com/disaster-recovery
2016 NetApp, Inc. All rights reserved.
Printed in the U.S. No part of this document covered by copyright may be reproduced in any form or by any meansgraphic, electronic, or
mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping, or storage in an electronic retrieval systemwithout prior written permission of the
copyright owner. Software derived from copyrighted NetApp material is subject to the following license and disclaimer: THIS SOFTWARE IS
PROVIDED BY NETAPP "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, WHICH ARE HEREBY DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL
NETAPP BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE
OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
NetApp reserves the right to change any products described herein at any time, and without notice. NetApp assumes no responsibility or
liability arising from the use of products described herein, except as expressly agreed to in writing by NetApp. The use or purchase of this
product does not convey a license under any patent rights, trademark rights, or any other intellectual property rights of NetApp. The product
described in this manual may be protected by one or more U.S. patents, foreign patents, or pending applications. RESTRICTED RIGHTS
LEGEND: Use, duplication, or disclosure by the government is subject to restrictions as set forth in subparagraph (c)(1)(ii) of the Rights in
Technical Data and Computer Software clause at DFARS 252.277-7103 (October 1988) and FAR 52-227-19 (June 1987).
NetApp, the NetApp logo, Go Further, Faster, AltaVault, ASUP, AutoSupport, Campaign Express, Cloud ONTAP, Clustered Data ONTAP,
Customer Fitness, Data ONTAP, DataMotion, Fitness, Flash Accel, Flash Cache, Flash Pool, FlashRay, FlexArray, FlexCache, FlexClone,
FlexPod, FlexScale, FlexShare, FlexVol, FPolicy, GetSuccessful, LockVault, Manage ONTAP, Mars, MetroCluster, MultiStore, NetApp Insight,
OnCommand, ONTAP, ONTAPI, RAID DP, RAID-TEC, SANtricity, SecureShare, Simplicity, Simulate ONTAP, SnapCenter, Snap Creator, SnapCopy,
Snap, Dr, SnapIntegrator, SnapLock, SnapManager, SnapMirror, SnapMover, SnapProtect, SnapRestore, Snapshot, SnapValidator, SnapVault,
StorageGRID, Tech OnTap, Unbound Cloud, WAFL, and other names are trademarks or registered trademarks of NetApp Inc., in the United
States and/or other countries. All other brands or products are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders and should be
treated as such. A current list of NetApp trademarks is available on the web at: http://www.netapp.com/us/legal/netapptmlist.aspx.