Data Storage Today

CIO Today Network Sites:   Top Tech News  |   CIO Today   |   Mobile Tech Today   |   Data Storage Today
News & Information for Data Storage Professionals
Riverbed Stingray in AWS
The only full-featured ADC
available for Amazon EC2 today

www.riverbed.com
Tuesday, May 21st 
Stingray Traffic Manager on Amazon Web Services
Home
Data Centers
Storage Solutions
Storage Networks
Data Storage Issues
Data Security
Enterprise I.T.
DST Press Releases
 
Free Newsletters
Top CIO News
 
Mobile Tech Today
 

Advertisement

Data Storage Issues

AT&T Study Shows Step-Up in Disaster Planning

AT&T Study Shows Step-Up in Disaster Planning
May 29, 2012 10:42AM

Bookmark and Share
AT&T's annual study found that mobile security services and cloud computing have become major parts of disaster recovery plans, according to the study. Sixty percent of respondents are investing in mobile security services, and 38 percent are making investments in cloud computing to ensure business continuity.

Brocade delivers a comprehensive cloud-optimized networking portfolio of products and open-architecture solutions to simplify and accelerate the deployment of cloud computing and provide maximum deployment flexibility with plug-in scalability. Click here to learn more.

Information technology doesn't remain the same over the years, and neither can disaster recovery Relevant Products/Services plans. A new study from AT&T Relevant Products/Services shows that businesses and organizations have stepped up their planning, as they move to include such major new factors as mobile Relevant Products/Services devices, the "bring your own device" trend, social networks and cloud Relevant Products/Services computing.

The new study found a 12 percent increase over the 2011 report in efforts to prioritize planning and implementation of a business continuity plan. In all, 83 percent of executives see the need for such planning being a priority. Eighty-six percent already have a business continuity plan in place in case of a disaster or threat, which is an increase of 8 percent over the last five years.

Mobile Networks

This annual study of business continuity has been conducted by AT&T over the past 10 years, surveying IT executives at companies with at least $25 million in annual revenue. It was based on responses from 504 IT executives with primary responsibility for business continuity in five metropolitan areas in the U.S. -- Austin/San Antonio/Houston, Los Angeles/Orange County, Miami/Ft. Lauderdale/Tampa/Orlando, Ohio, and New York City.

Mobile security services and cloud computing have become major parts of current contingency plans, according to the study. Sixty percent of respondents are investing in mobile security services, and 38 percent are making investments in cloud computing.

Two-thirds of executives are including wireless Relevant Products/Services network Relevant Products/Services capabilities in their business continuity plans, and more than half -- 52 percent -- expect that spending for mobile security services will increase. Sixty-five percent of responding companies will be investing in new telecommunications technologies to support their expanded IT infrastructures.

As mobile devices and social networking boom, the study found that most respondents -- 87 percent -- are more concerned about potential threats from mobile networks and devices than the 76 percent who feel the same way about social networks.

The Turning Point of 9/11

AT&T found that 29 percent of respondents have actually used their contingency planning, with the most frequent reasons being extreme weather, power outages at facilities, or IT failure.

Laura DiDio, an analyst with Information Technology Intelligence Consulting, noted that a key "historic event" in the shift of companies' attention about business continuity was 9/11. She said that her research has indicated that CIOs, CTOs, and IT managers had "a much harder time" before 9/11 in securing approvals for backup Relevant Products/Services and continuity plans.

Another specific change, she said, was that off-site backups were sometimes located within a half-mile or less from the company, but the folly of that became apparent on that day in September, especially for Wall Street firms. Now, DiDio noted, the "conventional wisdom" is that off-site locations should be 10 to 15 miles away.

DiDio also pointed out that the explosive growth in cloud services can make disaster planning easier, "but only if you're using a reputable provider" and if the service agreement includes specific guarantees for disaster recovery.

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:

Advertisement



 Data Storage Issues
1. Hospitals Lose $8.3B Using Old Tech
2. Action! IBM Enters the Film Biz
3. Filr an IT-Friendly Dropbox Alternative
4. DropBox Launches Single Sign-On
5. End for Roadrunner Supercomputer


advertisement


 Most Popular Articles
1. Half of Companies To Mandate BYOD by 2017, Gartner Says
2. Best of Interop Award Winners Announced
3. Novell Filr Offers IT-Friendly Dropbox Alternative
4. BitTorrent Offers Alpha of P2P File-Syncing App
5. 75% of Breaches Financially Motivated, 20% Are Espionage

Have an informed opinion on this story?
Send a Letter to the Editor.
We want to know what you think.
Send us your Feedback.

 Related Topics  Latest News & Special Reports

  China Hackers Resume U.S. Attacks
  Cyberattacks Could Help Syrian Raids
  Financial Times Latest Hacking Target
  HP and SAP Team on HANA Database
  Cloud Computing Gains Another Rival

 Technology Marketplace

BYOD & MDM
Build a business case for a BYOD program.
 
CRM Systems
Free Download: Understanding the Voice of the Customer
 
Cloud & Virtualization
Brocade technologies help enable the full benefits of virtualization.
Riverbed Stingray Traffic Manager on Amazon Web Services
 
Contact Centers
Unlock the potential in your people with Microsoft Dynamics
 
Customer Data
Free Download: Understanding the Voice of the Customer
 
Customer Service
Unlock the potential in your people with Microsoft Dynamics
 
Data Security
Simpana® 10 software: an exponential leap forward
 
Data Storage
Brocade makes it easier to deploy, manage, and scale networks.
 
Enterprise Software
Simpana® 10 software: an exponential leap forward
 
Mobile Apps
Build great mobile apps that drive engagement.
 
Network Security
Brocade makes it easier to deploy, manage, and scale networks.
 
Enterprise Software Spotlight

Should Enterprises Skip Over Windows 8?
Because of the interface changes and compatibility issues, most businesses will not adopt Windows 8 as their standard, but must be prepared to meet employee BYOD demand for it, Forrester Research says.

HP and SAP Team To Advance HANA Database Technology
The two tech leaders are working on a system that SAP says could fundamentally change the database market. HANA is SAP's technology that keeps data in-memory, for super fast processing.

Revlon Saving Millions with Microsoft Dynamics
The cosmetics giant is reporting millions of dollars in savings thanks to consolidating its enterprise resource planning by using Microsoft Dynamics ERP. Revlon CIO David Giambruno recently shared his story.

Advertisement
Navigation
Data Storage Today
Home/Top News | Data Centers | Storage Solutions | Storage Networks | Data Storage Issues | Data Security | Enterprise I.T.
DST Press Releases
Also visit these Enterprise Technology Sites
Top Tech News | CIO Today | Mobile Tech Today | Data Storage Today

Services:
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | XML/RSS Feed

About CIO Today Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Services for PR Pros (In partnership with NewsFactor) | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2013 Data Storage Today. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo. Member of Accuserve Ad Network.