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When Times are Tough, There’s
No Room for Risk
used with permission from
the HP Midsize Business Center
Don't Stop fortifying against risk
Four
ways to mitigate risk in a tough economy
Every business
deals with risk. But medium-sized businesses, with smaller
IT staff and tighter operating budgets are often more
exposed to risk than larger companies. This reality is never
more evident than in a down economy: When the repercussions
of a business disruption are as grave as they are, how do
you insulate your business from risk?
"For mid-sized
businesses, the financial impact of business disruptions is
tremendous," said Anil Miglani, senior vice president,
AMI-Partners. "We estimate that through security breaches
and data loss alone, medium-sized businesses worldwide lost
approximately US$4.7 billion in 2008."
According to
strategy consulting firm AMI-Partners, in 2008 medium-sized
businesses worldwide lost approximately US$4.7 billion due
to security breaches and loss of data.
However, taking
the right precautions with your IT infrastructure can help
you steer clear of danger. Here are four steps you can take
to mitigate risks to your revenue, your reputation, and your
investment – all the things that keep you awake at night as
you wait for this storm to pass.
1. Reduce the probability of downtime
Your order system goes down, leaving your e-commerce
customers unable to place orders. In addition to lost
revenue, this downtime can derail employees, leading to
productivity loss. While you’re focused on fixing the
problem, your competition has a chance to poach your
customers. Worst of all, failing to detect and fix the
problem means it may happen again.
High availability
of critical systems is the medium-sized business’s highest
IT priority, and it’s attainable with a few key changes:
►Invest
in reliable servers. Look for servers that have been
extensively tested and certified to run on the latest
operating systems. Couple that with a comprehensive set of
server management tools.
►Virtualize.
Virtualization can improve application availability, reduce
costs and simplify IT management.
►Build
redundancy into your network. Look for routers and
switches with virtual router redundancy protocol (VRRP) to
eliminate single points of failure.
2. Protect your data
Data breaches might not happen as often as network and
application downtime. But when they occur, they can be
catastrophic. Implementing a few key protections can greatly
minimize the chances of data loss.
►Replicate
and use deduplication. Look for a storage backup
solution that lets you cost-effectively replicate data for
quick recovery. Deduplication
helps ensure that you don’t waste bandwidth, disk space and
effort backing up multiple copies of the same data.
►Encrypt
the data you back up to tape. If you don’t encrypt your
tape data, anyone can walk off with your tape and access its
data. Hardware encryption that comes with the Linear
Tape-Open update (LTO-4) for tape drives, will give you the
added security you need.
3. Secure the network
►Prevent
security breaches. Deploy a solution that has automated
threat detection and offers a single-screen view of the
network. It should allow you to map, configure and monitor
both wired and wireless networks.
►Don’t
forget printers and PCs. Improve your data security with
print security solutions that can prohibit unauthorised
users from accessing information and documents.
4. Reduce disruptive changes
If your own planned maintenance and management tasks are the
biggest cause of downtime, opt for automated solutions.
Automation simplifies management so you focus on the
business.
►Automate
routine server and PC management. Management software
can minimize complexity and lower risks of downtime. As for
PCs, it can accelerate installations and deployments of
software and operating systems.
►Delegate.
If you don’t have in-house IT staff who can monitor your
systems around the clock, consider outsourcing that
function.
How HP can help
You may not be in a position to deploy every possible
solution to prevent every conceivable business risk. But
when a bad economy narrows your margin for error, you can’t
afford unnecessary exposure to business risks. View an
solution configuration of how the solution is designed. |