In many organizations, Information Technology Disaster Recovery strategies and capabilities are not aligned with the needs or expectations of the business. This isn’t always the fault of Information Technology personnel and in many cases they established recovery priorities, strategies and capabilities in a silo.
We have observed cases where Information Technology management has implemented recovery strategies simply based on the verbal conversations held with senior management and without any reference to the results of the Business Impact Analysis and/or discussion with the business.
The business must take an active part in aligning its needs with the IT organization. There are critical aspects of the IT recovery strategies that must be addressed by the business:
The lack of business and IT alignment with RTOs and RPOs can lead to catastrophic impacts to customer service, operations, shareholder value, etc.
in the event of a critical disruption. The business and Information Technology must have honest and open discussions on RTOs and RPOs and how they compare to what is in place. Even if a gap exists between the objective and actual, it is out in the open and the business can work around it and/or accept the risk until Information Technology can rectify it.
So, how do you align business and Information Technology RTOs and RPOs?
As part of the Governance and metrics we implement for our clients, we establish Critical Success Factors (CSFs) and Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) to schedule review, measure and align the business and information technology needs, RTOs and RPOs on a regular basis (e.g., annually). These CSFs and KPIs are established for the program, business and Information Technology as follows:
By setting these metrics in place, you can measure the level of compliance and ability to meet the required RTOs and RPOs on a regularly scheduled basis. This will greatly aid in aligning business and Information Technology recovery.