Commvault Unveils Clumio Backtrack - Near Instant Dataset Recovery in S3

Examining The Role Of Cloud Backup In A Disaster Recovery Plan Template

What is a Disaster Recovery Plan Template?

Disaster recovery is a subcomponent of a business continuity plan. It focuses on restoring core operations while minimizing or avoiding downtime caused by a disaster event. In today’s data-centric business environment, the IT portion of a disaster recovery plan is typically the heart of a modern business continuity plan. It’s intended to ensure core operations remain online when a disaster event — such as a ransomware attack, natural disaster, or prolonged power outage — threatens the interruption of business continuity.

Many organizations use a disaster recovery plan template to ensure they account for every last element when creating their plan. This document covers aspects that can range from keeping power on to secondary lines of communication and ensuring IT systems remain operational.

Below, we’ll look at perhaps the most important part of a disaster recovery plan template for organizations that have migrated their data and workloads to the cloud: cloud backup.

How Cloud Backup Fits into a Disaster Recovery Plan Template

The IT portion of a disaster recovery plan is primarily focused on recovering and restoring the mission-critical data and workloads needed to ensure business continuity. For example, if your business has experienced a ransomware attack and lost access to its primary data, the disaster recovery plan outlines the steps needed to restore that data so core operations can continue.

If your organization has migrated to the cloud, a cloud backup solution is the ideal method to facilitate a restore since it can leverage the scale and elasticity of the cloud. The cloud backup solution allows you to automatically back up data on a customized schedule and then store the data. Should data recovery be required, the solution can restore the data from the most recent backup.

It’s crucial to note that data can only be recovered and restored if there’s a valid backup copy to restore from, making the security of the backup data paramount. If your backup data copy is unsecured and exposed, you are risking your ability to recover the data. Plus, since business continuity is time-sensitive, the disaster recovery plan should be able to restore the most important data and workloads first so your most essential operations and processes can continue unhindered while a full restore completes.

Therefore, an effective disaster recovery plan template for a cloud-native organization should include:

  • A viable cloud backup solution
  • A way to ensure the security of the backups
  • A way to identify and prioritize the mission-critical data needed to ensure business continuity

 

However, not all cloud backup solutions are capable of checking all these boxes. The cloud backup tool you choose will directly affect your organization’s disaster recovery abilities.

Achieve Secure Cloud Backup and Rapid Disaster Recovery with Clumio

Clumio’s secure cloud backup platform optimizes disaster recovery with features designed to streamline data restoration—enabling an organization to meet or exceed its recovery time objective (RTO) during a disaster event.

Clumio safeguards backup copies by storing them in an encrypted, air-gapped backup solution outside of the primary account — meaning if your primary data is accessed or compromised, the backup remains safe. When data restoration is needed, Clumio’s granular and flexible recovery capabilities can quickly identify and rapidly restore the specific mission-critical data and applications needed to maintain business continuity while a full recovery completes.

 

Cloud backup is the key to a successful disaster recovery plan template. Learn why Clumio is the industry’s leading innovator for cloud backup and rapid disaster recovery by scheduling a demo today. We’ll show you how your business’s data can be fully protected by Clumio in under 15 minutes, without the need to install any new infrastructure, software, or conduct any pre-planning beforehand.

You may also be interested in

// Blog

3 Essential Data Protection & Security Principles to Know

In the current climate of ransomware and near-daily reports of data breaches,  many organizations...

Read More >>

// Blog

Backups vs. Snapshots—they are not the same, you really need both

After 20 years of helping customers design well architected primary and secondary storage solutio...

Read More >>