To ride technology’s roiling waves rather than slip beneath them, many of your clients are shifting IT staff focus from operational support and maintenance to their organizations’ business strategies and innovation goals.
To ride technology’s roiling waves rather than slip beneath them, many of your clients are shifting IT staff focus from operational support and maintenance to their organizations’ business strategies and innovation goals.
Almost daily, business headlines describe how powerful, inexorable waves of information technology roll through our world transforming how we process, communicate, store, secure, and use data.
Disaster Recovery as a Service is fast becoming a business essential as it’s implemented in more and more enterprise multi-site resilience strategies . Hardly surprising, since DRaaS simplifies recovery operations by combining protection, orchestration, and automation.
Now that a hefty majority of enterprise systems, applications, and workloads are considered mission- or business-critical , discussions about business continuity and disaster recovery focus on IT resilience architectures employing multiple geographically-distributed data centers that use live application failover to prevent downtime.
These days, most enterprise systems, applications, and workloads are deemed mission- or business-critical . So, in addition to redundancy and high availability, discussions about business continuity and disaster recovery focus on IT resilience architectures employing multiple geographically-distributed data centers that use live application failover to prevent downtime.
As I mentioned in my last post, 68% of those in organizations committed to a multi-site resilience strategy – e.g., using Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) , shifting IT infrastructure to a managed service provider environment , or deploying hybrid solutions – have confidence that their IT environments will perform as expected during unplanned downtime.