Corporate Continuity for the 21st Century

written by: Mandy Gee; article published: year 2010, month 04;

In: Root » Business » Business IT

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Business dependency on IT systems has never been greater, so when things go wrong the impact can be catastrophic. Whether its the CEO waiting for information as part of an acquisition negotiation, or the countless of processes that flow through the enterprise website, any glitch in the IT infrastructure can wreak havoc with productivity, revenue and the organizations respectability.

Yet despite the important role of business applications the approach to keeping them up and running remains in the dark ages for many organizations. In todays aggressive and budget-sensitive world nothing short of continuous availability is required for the most important applications.

What business owners need to demand, is a cost-effective continuous availability for the 21st century. One that is architected to focus on those applications that are most important; to be flexible enough to fit into existing and future IT infrastructures; to deliver integrated high availability and disaster protection in a single solution; to allow accelerated performance over wide area networks; to deliver unparalleled levels of automation and control, and to do all this with minimum configuration and within budget.

Crucially, these systems guard business critical applications against downtime. Often, they will integrate class leading replication technology with application monitoring and disaster recovery to deliver continuous availability meaning users are not disrupted when IT systems go down.

Company demands on IT change constantly. As new applications are introduced and present configurations alter, the high availability software must adapt. Automated discovery prevents configuration creep that could leave current applications exposed and the latest systems coming to market offer a point and click dashboard to protect new and present applications.

Many systems provide an intuitive dashboard enabling real time visibility and control of application availability with a combination of local and remote protection choices. Policies and rules determine exactly what should happen to guard critical services
and automated or manual failover options are available to meet business and IT requirements.

The nature of IT systems is that at some point they will go wrong. Remote factors such as power interruptions may take entire data rooms down. Application failures will cause business processes to fail. Selective component failures may take individual machines down. SAN issues may disrupt physical or virtual clusters and
complete sites are increasingly threatened by power issues and environmental disasters.

Continuous Availability solutions defend against all of these scenarios, and more. By taking a business centric approach it is the only solution that will keep users working even when multiple software applications go down. The systems are developed to focus on the user experience and keep them working when IT outages are inevitable. They integrate local high availability and remote disaster protection into one seamless solution to provide business continuity. This ensures important applications stay available through unplanned IT downtime as well as enabling intended maintenance without disruption.

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