These Three Numbers Prove How Important a Disaster Recovery Plan Really Is
If you’re in charge of managing the security systems and network designs of a business, the most important thing you can do to protect the company is to create a disaster recovery plan (or turn to an IT services company that can help you create one). If you don’t believe that disaster recovery plans really are essential to the security and safe network management of a company, take a look at the numbers below and see how businesses are affected, every day, by problems with security and data breaches:
16,856: The number of businesses, on average, that experience some level of a security breach or data loss. When security systems are compromised, even the smallest mistake or lost piece of data can end up causing a lot of problems — and no matter how powerful your company is, there’s no way to ensure that you’re 100% protected against things like natural disasters and security system hacks.
7: The number of different areas affected by a security breach that companies end up paying for. On average, a serious data breach requires a company to allocate funding for reputation management (29% of funding), lost worker productivity (21%), lost sales (19%), forensics and analyses (12%), additional tech support (10%), and compliance regulation (8%). Depending on the business and the industry affected, there could be even more costs if a security threat comes to light.
$50,000 per hour: The amount of money that 80% of data center managers say that they have paid in downtime costs, according to a recent survey conducted by USA Today. Depending on the amount of data that is lost during a blackout or power outage, it’s very possible that some businesses could end up paying even more.
Quite simply, no business can afford to lose important data because of an unforeseeable disaster, and no business manager needs the stress of building a business back up after a security breach or data loss has occurred.
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