Saturday, March 3, 2012

What is a Disaster?



Disasters come in many shapes and sizes.

As the photo of my neighbours house shows, disasters can strike at any time and anywhere.

Floods, fire, storms, earthquake. These are the types of events most people think of when you mention the word disaster.

What about something that has been in the news a lot recently - unavailability of EFTPOS, ATMs and internet banking. Is this a disaster?
 
If you are a customer of the bank trying to pay a bill, withdraw cash or make a purchase, it's probably only an inconvenience.
But what if you are a business that relies heavily on EFTPOS?
 
Perception of disasters is different for different people.
 
I have teenage kids, and I know that for them, the loss of internet or mobile phone connectivity is a disaster..without connectivity they cannot update their Facebook status or play their favourite games..their life is as good as over.
 
Yet to me, it's not even a minor inconvenience.
 
We've had some pretty big floods in Queensland over the past year or so and the media keeps writing about the flood disasters and the negative impacts it's had on the state.
 
True, many towns and businesses were flooded (and several people lost their lives), however, to a majority of the population, the flooding has been little more than an inconvenience, and for some, an opportunity.
 
It's all about perception.
 
Until next time.

Welcome


Hi all,

My name is Peter and I'll be your host through the wonderful world of Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Management.

I've been working in IT for over 28 years as a "worker bee" and over the years I've had the pleasure of experiencing many near "disasters". Thankfully all have worked out well, usually due to good luck and dedicated staff, rather than thought out and documented processes and procedures.

In my time spent in IT, I have noticed the changes in Disaster Recovery thinking, from backing up data to floppy disk and tape and "cold," disaster recovery site, through to current strategies of virtualization, clustering, multiple data centres, "cloud" technologies and alternate working arrangements.

While this blog will have an IT focus, the thoughts and strategies presented can be used across all areas of a business.

Over time, I hope to pass on my experiences, lessons learned, pitfalls to be wary of and latest trends in Disaster Recovery/Business Continuity Management. Using this information, I hope I can provide information that will assist you in dealing with your own "disasters".

DISCLAIMER:
The thoughts and opinions presented on the blog are my own, not those of any current or previous employer or any organisation I am affiliated with.
I have not, and will not, accept any inducement from any organisation to push their agenda or recommend their products.
Any books, products, articles or web sites I recommend are things I have found useful and have utilised on a regular basis.