disaster recovery as a service attitudes and adoption report 2016

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DISASTER RECOVERY AS A SERVICE ATTITUDES & ADOPTION REPORT

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Page 1: Disaster Recovery as a Service Attitudes and Adoption Report 2016

DISASTER RECOVERY AS A SERVICE ATTITUDES & ADOPTION REPORT

Page 2: Disaster Recovery as a Service Attitudes and Adoption Report 2016

WE TALKED TO 274 IT DECISIONMAKERS AT COMPANIES WITH 100-5,000 EMPLOYEES

Page 3: Disaster Recovery as a Service Attitudes and Adoption Report 2016

THE REPORT PROVIDES A DEEP DIVE INTO THE FOLLOWING:

Outage Handling

Experiences & Downtime

Costs

Disaster Recovery Adoption By

Vertical (i.e. Finance, Healthcare)

Current Disaster Recovery

Capabilities

Understanding Peer

Disaster Recovery

Capabilities

Understanding of

Disaster Recovery as

a Service

Page 4: Disaster Recovery as a Service Attitudes and Adoption Report 2016

KEY FINDINGS

Page 5: Disaster Recovery as a Service Attitudes and Adoption Report 2016

of small to mid-sized companies rely on tape or disk-based technology as part of their disaster recovery strategy, which is why they are unable to quickly restore critical applications when servers crash.

80%

Page 6: Disaster Recovery as a Service Attitudes and Adoption Report 2016

NOT SURE WHAT AN HOUR OF DOWNTIME FOR YOUR CRM OR EMAIL WOULD COST?Join the club. More than 37% couldn’t quantify the costs of downtime to their organization.

Page 7: Disaster Recovery as a Service Attitudes and Adoption Report 2016

54%do not have failover capabilities to restore key business applications within one hour of failure

Page 8: Disaster Recovery as a Service Attitudes and Adoption Report 2016

20%said they haven’t

tested their disaster recovery plans in the past

year.