Best Offer Bundle

Audit Program

Compliant Audit Program


DRP / BCP Issues

What is
Disaster Recovery?

DRP BCP Basics

Why Plans Fail

Cloud Backup

Are You Prepared
for a Disaster?

Pandemic

Risk Assessment

Process

Best Practices

Media Communication

Clean up - How To

What to do after
an explosion,
terrorist attack, or
random act of violence

Disaster Recovery
and Business Continuity

Metrics

Funding

Funding Request
Presentation

Maximum Tolerable
Period of Disruption

Disaster Recovery Guide

Common Mistakes

Why Disaster Recovery
Business Continuity
is not complete
and or inaccurate


Business Continuity &
Disaster Recovery Template

A disaster recovery is a response to a declared disaster or a regional disaster. It is the restoration or recovery of an entire Agent computer. A disaster recovery plan describes how an organization is to deal with potential disasters.

The DRP template includes everything needed to customize the Disaster Recovery Plan to fit your specific requirement. More...


Security Manual Template

Most companies have initiated the necessary steps to safeguard their company assets. Information security has moved from a business cost to a business enabler. However, new threats and technologies are constantly and rapidly changing the network landscape. System administrators must scan the network continually for known security weaknesses, keep their skills current and, most important, reexamine corporate security policies periodically.

The IT Security Manual Template provides all the essential sections of a complete security manual and walks you through the creation of each step.. More...


Job Descriptions

The Internet and IT Position Descriptions HandiGuide® was completed in 2010 and is over 650 pages; which includes sample organization charts, a job progression matrix, and 231 Internet and IT job descriptions.  The book also addresses Fair Labor Standards, the ADA, and is in a new easier to read format. More...

 

What is Disaster Recovery

Information on Disaster Recovery

A disaster recovery is a response to a declared disaster or a regional disaster. It is the restoration or recovery of an entire Agent computer. A disaster recovery plan describes how an organization is to deal with potential disasters.

Disaster PlanJust as a disaster is an event that makes the continuation of normal functions impossible, a disaster recovery plan consists of the precautions taken so that the effects of a disaster will be minimized, and the organization will be able to either maintain or quickly resume mission-critical functions.

Typically, disaster recovery planning involves an analysis of business processes and continuity needs; it may also include a significant focus on disaster prevention.

The Disaster Recovery Planning Template (DRP) can be used for any sized enterprise.  

The template and supporting material have been updated to be Sarbanes-Oxley compliant.  The complete package includes:

  • Disaster Recovery Plan Template
  • Business and IT Impact Analysis Questionnaire
  • Work Plan

With the template is a 3 page Job Description for the Disaster Recovery Manager.  The Disaster Recovery Plan Template PREMIUM Bundle contains 11 additional key job descriptions.

Clients can also subscribe to Janco's DRP update service and receive all updates to the DRP Template*. 

The DRP template includes everything needed to customize the Disaster Recovery Plan to fit your specific requirement. 

 Order Disaster PlanDisaster Plan Sample

 

 

 

 

 

Disaster Plan / Business Continuity News




Business process contingency plan is disaster recovery plan

A disaster recovery plan (DRP) - sometimes referred to as a business continuity  plan (BCP) or business process contingency plan (BPCP) - describes how an organization is to deal with potential disasters. Just as a disaster is an event that makes the continuation of normal functions impossible, a disaster recovery plan consists of the precautions taken so that the effects of a disaster will be minimized and the organization will be able to either maintain or quickly resume mission-critical functions. Typically, disaster recovery planning involves an analysis of business processes and continuity needs; it may also include a significant focus on disaster prevention. - more info



Disasters can occur any where at any time

Disasters are unpredictable by nature and can strike anywhere at anytime with little or no warning. Recovering from one is expensive and time consuming, particularly for those who have not taken the time to think ahead and prepare for such possibilities.

Disaster Planning - Janco has found that 80% of all enterprises that do not have a disaster recovery / business continuity plan in place before a disaster occurs never reopen.  However, when disaster strikes, those who have prepared and made recovery plans survive with comparatively minimal loss and/or disruption of productivity.

Disaster Business Continuity

Disasters can take several different forms. Some primarily impact individuals -- e.g., hard drive meltdowns -- while others have a larger, collective impact. Disasters can occur such as power outages, floods, fires, storms, equipment failure, sabotage, terrorism, or even epidemic illness. Each of these can at the very least cause short-term disruptions in normal business operation. But recovering from the impact of many of the aforementioned disasters can take much longer, especially if organizations have not made preparations in advance.

Most of us recognize that these potential problems as possibilities. Unfortunately the randomness of some of these disasters lulls some organizations into a sense of false security-"that's not likely to happen here." However, if proper preparations have been made, the disaster recovery process does not have to be exceedingly stressful. Instead the process can be streamlined, but this facilitation of recovery will only happen where preparations have been made. Organizations that take the time to implement disaster recovery plans ahead of time often ride out catastrophes with minimal or no loss of data, hardware, or business revenue. This in turn allows them to maintain the faith and confidence of their customers and investors.

Disaster Recovery Planning is the factor that makes the critical difference between the organizations that can successfully manage crises with minimal cost and effort and maximum speed, and those that are left picking up the pieces for untold lengths of time and at whatever cost providers decide to charge; organizations forced to make decision out of desperation.

- more info



Disaster Plan Common Failures

Disaster Recovery Business Continuity - Common Failures 

Disaster Types
Order Business Continuity Plan Sample Business Continuity Plan

Most common mistakes made in Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Planning are eliminated by implementing the Janco Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Template.  Problems that are avoided are:

  • Failure to identify every potential event that can jeopardize the infrastructure and data that your enterprise depends
  • Failure to cross-train personnel in disaster recovery and business continuity
  • Failure to create a communication processes which will work when your communication infrastructure is lost
  • Failure to have adequate backup power
  • Failure to know which resources need to be restored first
  • Failure to have  adequate physical documentation of your Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity plan
  • Failure to validate the adequacy of your back ups
  • Failure  to test your Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity plan
  • Failure to have passwords available to the Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity team
  • Failure to keep your Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity plan up to date
Order Business Continuity Plan Sample Business Continuity Plan
 
- more info



A disaster occurs -- now what?

A disaster or business interruption occurs, what do you do?  A quick roadmap to follow is:

  • Do not panic and remain calm! When a disaster or business interruption occurs the first priority number is to ensure the safety of the employees.
  • Evaluate the disaster!  Determine the impact on your personnel and enterprise operations, this evaluation the event is critical in making the decision to activate the disaster recovery business continuity procedures.
  • Communicate with everyone that can be impacted! Communicate with your team, managers, affiliates, and vendors frequently. Even if there is no status to report, do not leave anyone guessing or letting them draw their own conclusions.
  • Know the disaster recovery business continuity plan! Testing the Business Continuity Plan regularly helps everyone in becoming familiar with what will happen and how it will be done.
  • Be decisive! Once you have determined the level of disaster and everyone is safe to operate, it is time to make the decision if you need to implement the business continuity procedures or if the downtime for recovery acceptable.
  • Start the process! Start with recovering the most business critical systems first to restore business operations to a functional level. There should not be any question, which order which applications need to be restored first.
  • Lock down all backups and critical documentation! The first step to the recovery is having a set of data to recover from. This could be anything from archived tape, local disk copy, and a co-location or disaster recovery data center.
  • Use multiple solution paths! Assume that nothing will work and have alternatives in place  
  • Reactivate normal operations! Once the systems are operational, the disaster is over and systems are repaired it is time to move the workloads back to where they were originally.
- more info



Next Disaster Requires Culture of Preparedness

At the center of the recent White House report "Hurricane Katrina: Lessons Learned," there is a call to "foster a new, robust culture of preparedness."

The challenge comes after the report details the long list of tragedies that last year's deadly hurricane wrought, including more than 1,330 deaths and $96 billion in property damage. In terms of communications, 38 centers that normally handled 911 calls failed, while 3 million customers lost phone service.

The report urges a wide variety of players to build this new culture, including myriad federal agencies and tens of thousands of state and local emergency first responder agencies. And it calls on private citizens and the private sector to take part.

- more info