#Asia If the cloud fails, is your startup covered?

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The cloud is becoming a necessary part of any business, so here are some tips to make sure you are doing it right

CLOUD FINAL (1)

The cloud is the new reality. If they have not already, most organisations today are either in the process of adopting or planning to include the cloud as part of their data storage and protection strategy.

By 2020, Gartner predicts that a corporate ‘no-cloud’ policy will be as rare as a ‘no-Internet’ policy today.

The benefits are obvious: lower storage costs, less time required to manage under-utilised infrastructure, and greater agility for IT resources — helping professionals keep up with the constantly changing needs of the business.

Companies, as a result, can easily leverage data residing in the cloud to support business insights, legal or compliance requirements.

Yet, despite all the hype, things are not always rosy when moving data into the cloud, as failures and accidents do occur in the cloud too.

The cloud is not fool-proof

With the recent Amazon Web Services (AWS) outage in Australia paralysing companies for hours, one thing is for sure, the cloud is not fool-proof.

In today’s data-driven environment, the repercussions can be damning as companies are prevented from accessing business-critical data and applications.

On top of that, what if data stored in the cloud was to become corrupted or compromised in one location due to human error?

Also Read: The startup guide to cloud: How to build your business in the cloud

That error may be duplicated in the other locations as well. Data could also be accidentally deleted from the cloud.

Because the average cost of downtime is about US$100,000 per hour, or even as high as US$1.6 million per hour for certain organisations, how can companies protect data and ensure business continuity when storing information in the cloud?

Take the cloud into your own hands

In designing a strategy to ensure data in the cloud is protected and recoverable, here are some tips to minimise the impact of cloud storage outage or failure.

Prevention is better than cure

When storing everything in the cloud, companies run the risk of losing it forever. The best way to sidestep this is to regularly back up what technology stored in the cloud, just as they would on-premise.

Snapshot technologies are quickly becoming the go-to method for application and data recoverability as they minimise impact on uptime and performance. Besides, most public cloud providers support snapshots, replicas and simple application management.

While the cloud is pretty secure, there could potentially be times when data and information fall into the wrong hands. Encrypting highly sensitive data before storing it in the cloud is a necessity.

Good visibility across network infrastructure

Given the amount of data generated and stored in multiple locations today, ensuring tight control and visibility across the network infrastructure helps to secure the speed, agility and accessibility required for data recoverability.

Organisations can adopt a single platform approach that provides a holistic view across stacks of on—and— off premise infrastructure. Data, as a result, can be accessed and leveraged consistently across the enterprise. Only then can companies truly begin to capitalise on data as an asset.

Also Read: Cloud fintech service MakeLeaps announces new fundraising round from Rakuten Ventures Japan Fund

Poor management and protection of data across physical and virtual infrastructures would not only drive up storage costs, but also take time and effort to maintain the storage infrastructure or recover data in times of cloud failures or outages – instead of truly reaping value from the data.

By developing a ‘roadmap to cloud adoption’ or updating a corporate storage strategy, consider these tips and you’ll be able to effectively leverage the cloud with greater confidence.

Matthew Johnston is the  Area Vice President, ASEAN & Korea, Commvault

Photo courtesy of Pixabay.

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