Adopting cloud in your backup strategy By Sasha Malic, Solutions Architect, ContinuitySA. Today’s business environment is truly global—and that means it’s highly competitive and getting more so as the emerging economies flex their muscles. Cost pressures are unremitting and the demand for uninterrupted services and higher levels of personalised service than ever before has become the norm. In order to enable organizations to compete effectively in this demanding marketplace, CIOs are looking for increasing levels of performance from their infrastructure. At the top of their lists are ways to make infrastructure more dynamic, resilient and to take advantage of virtualization, which itself is changing the traditional computing model. As an aside, it’s advisable to be aware that there are many definitions of cloud computing — so many that the US Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has issued a formal definition to try and clarify things: “Cloud computing is a model for enabling ubiquitous, convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources (networks, servers, storage, applications and services) that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction." As a model for consuming and delivering infrastructure, the cloud enables self-service, different sourcing options and significant economies of scale. It’s also clear that organizations will use a combination of private and public clouds to achieve their goals. When it comes to backup, cloud has many attractions for CIOs, who face the challenge of increasing volumes of data and static IT budgets, allied to growing requirements to keep vital data and the systems it runs on available. In other words, traditional backup which protects the data is no longer sufficient — complete IT resilience is essential because without it, very few organizations can survive for extended periods. Caveat emptor By contrast, a true disaster recovery mirrors the entire system as well as providing the infrastructure on which to bring up the systems. A cloud based solution will leverage the syndication of such systems which the service provider can offer due to multiple customers that share the same infrastructure. A complete disaster recovery solution as described above is costly. It requires large volumes of data to be copied across the public Internet or via a private WAN link. A lot a bandwidth is required to ensure the recovery point objective remains at acceptable levels and the solution is reliable. Prioritising data and systems for replication is thus key, and to do so one must understand the organization’s risk profile and to identify critical data and system. To prioritise effectively, it is critical to perform a risk assessment as well as business impact and infrastructure impact analyses. Once this homework has been done, and you have a full understanding of the hierarchy of data and systems in relation to business criticality, then the business recovery plan can be created. And as part of this business recovery plan, cloud’s flexibility and ability to reduce costs will likely be an attractive solution. Author •Date: 22nd May 2012 • World •Type: Article • Topic: Cloud computing
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