Thursday, March 29, 2012

Better resources and technologies lift business confidence in backup and disaster recovery

BANGALORE, INDIA: Despite 2011 being one of the most tumultuous years on record, businesses around the world have grown in confidence about their ability to back up and then recover data and IT systems following a disaster.

According to the 2012 Acronis Global Disaster Recovery (DR) Index, businesses are on average 14 percent more confident in their backup and DR capabilities than they were compared to the previous year’s result in the Index. Key to this rise is the perceived improvements in having the right resources (tools/environment) and the right technologies for the job. Confidence in these two criteria alone has more than doubled in the past 12 months.

Underlying this increase in confidence is the fact that 66 percent of businesses are checking their backup and disaster recovery plans more regularly, possibly as a consequence of the catastrophic natural disasters which hit most regions during 2011, including destructive flooding in Australia, Brazil and Thailand, deadly earthquakes in New Zealand and Turkey, storms costing billions in damages across the United States and the devastating tsunami in Japan from which some businesses are still yet to fully recover.

Despite an overall improvement in confidence, other more concerning findings from the survey of almost 6,000 small and medium-sized businesses (SMB) in 18 countries include:
* Flat budgets: businesses are spending the same on backup and DR year on year (10 percent of IT spend).
* Almost half (47 percent) now feel that business executives are not supportive of their backup and disaster recovery operations.
* Data growth continues unabated: a typical SMB creates almost 40TB of fresh data each year.
* To err is human: 60 percent of those surveyed blame human error as the most common cause of system downtime.
* The cost of failure: average system downtime lasts 2.2 days costing each business $366,363 each year in lost productivity.

Managing hybrid physical, virtual and cloud environments presents biggest challenge
The vast majority (70 percent) of the IT managers surveyed agree that, for the second year running, their greatest challenge in a hybrid environment is moving data between physical, virtual and cloud environments. Yet, the survey found that most businesses are still failing to consolidate their backup and disaster recovery tools to address this challenge.

Most rely on multiple tools, with a third using three or more different solutions to protect their data. Over half (53 percent) use separate solutions for their physical and virtual environments.

Acronis Global Disaster Recovery Index ranking
To create the Index, each country surveyed was ranked based on its average responses from 11 questions about their confidence in backup and DR readiness, capabilities and practices. Questions covered technology, resources, procedures and executive buy-in.

Commenting on the findings, Bill Taylor-Mountford, president for Asia Pacific, Acronis said: “The survey findings suggest that the natural disasters of 2011 have been a catalyst for positive change when it comes to most businesses testing their backup and DR operations. However, for all the positives in the survey, too many strategic-level negatives, such as failure to get executive buy-in and the use of multiple, disjointed solutions, linger when it comes to keeping the business-critical digital assets of a business secure, protected and immediately available, particularly in a hybrid world.”

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