Disaster recovery as a service (DRaaS) can be a lifesaver for any business. Rather than picking up the pieces after an incident, DRaaS lets you proactively plan for and respond to a failure event. Whether it’s a small disaster like hardware failure or a huge disaster like a hurricane, DRaaS keeps you covered. With a better way to respond, you’re less likely to lose data or suffer from downtime—either of which can be costly enough to shut a business down. But do these incidents really happen frequently enough for you to worry about them? Do you really need DRaaS? Let’s look at the threat landscape first, then how a small investment in DRaaS can save you thousands.
Though DRaaS might not prevent every issue noted above, it’s a critical line of defense if the worst does happen. To sum it up, DRaaS can be a lifesaver for your business. But how do you rationalize the cost?
When disaster strikes you can help minimize your risks by having a solid disaster recovery plan in place. Paired with set recovery objectives and the right tools, a DRaaS solution pays for itself by helping you prevent data loss and downtime. According to Gartner, downtime can cost as much as $5600 per minute. That’s a big number, but it might not reflect your business’s unique circumstances. How much would you lose during a downtime event?
In a previous post we offer a general formula for calculating downtime costs, but let’s look at a quick example to show just how expensive one failure event can be. We’ll use simplified, round numbers to illustrate the point, but, of course, the reality is more complex.
Now let’s say your systems are all knocked offline and your staff can’t work for four hours. That adds up to $3,000 lost to downtime. But that’s just the start. Say you lose crucial work your team produced. Now you’re also contending with data loss. Add the cost of four hours of lost work and four hours of lost productivity and your total loss is $6,000. And that’s from a relatively small downtime event. Plus, that doesn’t include any damage to your reputation that may result. If you’re trying to rationalize the cost of DRaaS, know that this event probably could have been avoided with the right solution.
Downtime and data loss is costly for any business. It should be obvious that DRaaS is worth considering for your business, large or small. Think of DRaaS as an insurance policy. Pay a little now to avoid paying a lot later on. All it takes is one failure event.
And, if you’re looking for a solution that keeps all of your bases covered—no matter how severe the failure—consider booking a demo with a StorageCraft sales engineer. They can also help you find the right MSP technology partner to put the solution in place.