Business Continuity
The fact that there are significant ramifications for businesses without
a Disaster Recovery Plan (DRP) is an understatement.
Businesses suffering an incapacitating disaster without a DRP:
Only 43% resume operations
Of the 43%, only 29% in business 2 years later
Total of 87% will be out of business in 2 years
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Contingency Planning Research]
Although Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Planning traditionally
focus on information that exists in electronic form, paper-based data is equally
important. As of 2002, it is estimated that 90% of information is still retained
on paper. The number of pages consumed in US offices is going up by 20% annually
and the average document is copied 19 times in its lifetime.
The Securities and Exchange Commission has proposed (August, 2002) Business
Continuity rules that include: "Each plan, however, must at a minimum, address:
...(1) Data back-up and recovery (hard copy and electronic)"
A major fire at the Duchess Anna Amalia Library in Weimar, Germany on September
3, 2004 destroyed 25,000 books and damaged an additional 40,000 volumes. Although
a portion of the information was no doubt duplicated elsewhere, this tragedy
highlights the importance of backup for valuable documents.