INFORMATION AVAILABILITY
Be Prepared for the
Unpredictable with Nimble
Private Cloud Infrastructure
By BRIAN USSHER
Risk to your b u s i n e s s comes in many forms. There are natural disasters and economic downturns,
as well as legal and regulatory compliance issues. There’s also unplanned downtime caused by poorly planned change or
other unexpected issues. So, with all these
known and unknown potential problems,
how can IT organizations prepare for the
unpredictable?
Cloud computing infrastructure offers
many advantages compared to traditional
physical methods. From backup and replication of data, to ease of testing and restoration of business services after a disaster
has been declared, cloud infrastructure can
offer reliability, security, and affordability
to keep your business running smoothly.
The costs of downtime
Downtime leads to a cascade of related
costs. Deadlines or SLAs missed because
services were offline could lead to penalties and charges. You can incur overtime
to make up for lost productivity, and your
customers may look to your competitors.
Downtime costs more than money – it can
cost you customers.
The cloud makes disaster recovery
affordable
A private cloud strategy for achieving disaster recovery goals can provide
increased security and decreased IT
costs for businesses of all sizes. By
utilizing a replication target in the
cloud you can gain the benefits of
a secondary datacenter without the
capital expenditures (CapEx) for
hardware and build-out, or the
operations expenditures (OpEx)
for colocation, power, cooling,
redundant connectivity, maintenance, and hardware management.
By selecting a cloud-based
provider for data replication, your
workload can be replicated from virtual or physical environments to a high-availability cloud infrastructure. This
offers cost-effective access to enterprise-class resources, and since cloud-based data
backup is easier to test, you can save time
and money when testing your preparedness.
What does “secure” really mean?
One of the first scenarios people imagine about IT security is intrusion from the
outside. And while that threat is real and
requires appropriate measures, there are
many other factors that create IT insecurity.
For example, many small companies
have mission-critical applications on servers that are in the back of a storage room
or under a desk. Even in larger companies
with datacenters, the actual recovery procedure can involve transporting physical
backups and staff driving or flying to distant locations. During this arduous process, critical information is unavailable
to workers, partners, and customers – and
revenue is lost.
Redundancy. Recovery. Reliability.
True IT security is not just about securing your data with firewalls, intrusion
detection systems, and encryption and
authentication, but also the availability of
your data. You need redundancy in both
infrastructure and data protection for critical files and business services. Then you
need a business continuity plan that can
restore operations in minutes or hours,
not days. This adds up to IT reliability
that protects your business from the many
causes of downtime and lost revenue.
Standby resources to restore
business services
Go from just backing up your data to
an actual restoration plan for business continuity. You can add computing resources
that host your data in standby. A virtual
machine (VM) can be registered in standby
mode and quickly activated when needed
to keep your business up and running.
This moves your recovery time objective
(RTO) from days to just hours or minutes
while drastically lowering the cost of service compared to traditional means.
True IT security
With today’s private cloud infrastructure you can connect with a private line,
to your existing MPLS network, or over
VPN and SSL over the Internet. Enterprise
clouds are provisioned within SAS 70
Type II datacenters with 24x7 security that
includes onsite personnel, dual authentication biometric access, CCTV, and other
measures.
Protect your desktop data
After securing your servers and the data
they contain, there’s another IT vulnerability that you can easily avoid. Think about
the thousands of hours of work and countless documents and spreadsheets with vital
content like sales reports, prospect lists,
and new marketing programs your workforce has created. Now think about how
much of that isn’t backed up to your servers and exists only on a single PC or laptop
hard drive.
Close the loop between your
desktop and datacenter
A virtualization strategy can put your
desktop environment in the cloud, alongside your application servers – closing