Posts Tagged ‘Raid Data Recovery’

Who Is Looking After Your Data? How To Choose A Data Recovery Company

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

No matter if you have taken all the required precautions, when a server or a hard drive fails you can guarantee that the search for a company to sort out the problem will be the foremost thing on most peoples minds, but how do you choose the best comapny to do the job for you?

Making the right choice in which data recovery company to work with can be a bit of a chore at an often crucial time, but getting it right is vitally important to ensure the best success rate.

The company that gets your vote should have dedicated Data recovery staff that are professionally trained for the required task

Data recovery and file restoration should be the main focus of their day to day activities and not a task that they undertake every once in a while when they get a job in.

A true data recovery services company will be able to successfully recover data from Servers, Laptop’s, Desktop’s, CD/DVD’s and all other types of storage media, not simply just from a failed hard drive

They should have both the leading technology and skilled technicians to identify and solve the most challenging recovery situations presented to them.

If they are leaders in data solutions they should also be able to offer a full gamut of data recovery services including full server and raid recovery capabilities. If the company are an industry leader they will also offer a call out service as this is often a key requirement for server and raid data recovery.

Most professional data recovery will have proper labs facilities not just a back office with a bench. The data recovery lab is often the heart and sole of the operation.

If the recovery company need to strip your drive to effect a repair you need to get the data back as quick as possible in most cases so if the company do not have their own lab you may find your drive will need to be shipped abroad.

To sum up losing data can cripple a company or cause personal heartache, so make sure you are dealing with a reputable firm as much as you can, and ask the awkward questions.

Factors To Consider When Looking At Data Loss Risk Reduction

Friday, June 26th, 2009

Data loss emergencies can hit any business without any prior indication of a potential problem. Sometimes data loss issues can be nothing more than a business hiccup and not to much data is lost, or the lost data can quickly be reworked  to get the situation back to normal. Conversely though large data loss scenarios can have an devastating effect on a business and the more employees they have or the more reliant they are on their IT infrastructure, then the bigger the problem.

A typical example of a large data problem would be perhaps a failed disk or raid array on a Microsoft exchange server. E-mail is becoming the life blood of many organisations and without it effective client and supplier communications can quite literally cease.

The effect will of course impact larger companies more than smaller organisations but the effect of data loss can still be quite devastating none the less.

With the ever increasing reliance on IT most business owners will have started to become reasonably educated about the need for a disaster recovery plan for their business, and plans may have already been put in place but this does not make the system infallible as if the plan has note yet been tested, or has not been implemented which often happens if a business waits for suitable window if a server needs upgrading for example, then the company will still be open to risk.

So what is the cost of a data loss disaster? This is a question often asked by smaller business as they need to establish a sensible return on investment in order to justify the cost of setting up a plan. Unfortunately the return of investment is a negative one in most cases, that is unless there is a data emergency,  then there will be no return on investment. There will on the other side of the coin though be a large risk reduction. A good measure that could be used for a sales organisation though could be loss of potential sales.

This can give very clear indicators as to potential revenue loss versus business down time and business continuity investment. For many organisations the loss of a days sales could have a very impact on cash flow and for larger companies potential loss could have an even greater effect.

Obviously this would scale up or down depending on the business affected. Other costs that can be factored in could also include the actual cost of recovery, legislative fines due to failure to hold critical business data and of course future sales if essential client records have been lost.

As well as measurable costs a company also need to factor intangibles into any return on investment or risk reduction calculation. Typical factors here could include activities such as re-population of customer CRM systems, additional management costs and business costs of running temporary as opposed to automated IT systems etc.

Another critical factor that should never be overlooked in the event of a data emergency is the restoration of the data. In many cases data can be irrevocably lost due to bungled attempts at recovery by inexperienced IT technicians.

Also if you are employing the services of one of the  data recovery companies you need to check their potential methodology and ensure they will not work on the actual donor disks as it is crucial to keep the main data source intact at all times.

Specialist business continuity providers will have strict protocols in place to ensure the absolute integrity of the source data. Working on the original data hard drives should simply not be an option because if the file structure or data is compromised in any way then your business could experience total data loss.

For USB data recovery help visit the IT support Manchester website.