Tuesday, 26 April 2011

Cloud Computing & Business Continuity Planning

Business Continuity Planning (BCP) or Disaster Recovery Planning (DRP) is on the mind of every Enterprise. This can be compared to an Insurance Plan that you or I would buy and companies pay a huge premium to take care of a disaster scenario to ensure that their critical business processes & customers are not impacted or minimally impacted in a disaster situation. From the cloud perspective these days, the critical business processes and systems are very dependent on the Cloud-based applications. BCP involves scoping & planning, conducting a Business Impact Assessment and developing the plan and DRP includes developing the recovery processes, testing them and implementing the disaster recovery processes.

Cloud Computing provides the alternative to an in-house BCP/DRP implementation. You should NOT assume that if you are onto a Cloud Service, you automatically have BCP/DRP. That is a very wrong assumption that many have. In many instances, Cloud platforms do have alternate sites and if one goes down, the availability of your service is automatically served from the alternate site but again, it depends on how the Cloud Service Provider has configured the service!

Your fate is in the hands of the Cloud service provider whose fate is in the hands of..........?

A lot of planning goes into the BCP/DRP with involvement from senior management and key BCP functions / departments. Adopting a cloud strategy for BCP/DRP offers significant benefits to the enterprise without large amounts of capital expenditure and human resources. An enterprise should define their BCP/DRP needs and then carefully evaluate the Cloud Service Provider to ensure that the business needs are met by the provider. A critical issue is the stability and viability of the Cloud Service Provider (CSP). The CSP should be financially strong, technically capable and have the organizational structure & resources to ensure that it will be around when you need it in the short run & the long run!  The CSP should be able to provide secure access from remote locations, distributed architecture, redundancy, geographical dispersion, backup infrastructure, dynamically scalable & storage area networks.

So choose your Cloud Service Provider wisely after doing thorough research so that you are not caught without an umbrella or a rain coat on a sudden rainy day!

Also posted on BMC Communities blog - Cloud-n-more

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