I am not here to create FUD. I am merely here to say, “Stop what you’re doing on Thursday, November 13, and consider what your company would do if disaster struck.”
Why Thursday? Because on Thursday, November 13, at 10 a.m. Pacific time, millions of relatively normal southern Californians will stop what they’re doing and drop to the ground wherever they happen to be, in the largest earthquake-preparedness drill ever conducted in the United States. The Great Southern California ShakeOut will model what would happen when a magnitude 7.8 earthquake hits the southern San Andreas fault on that day at that time. People in homes, schools, businesses, and public places all around southern California will do the “Drop, Cover, and Hold On” drill to practice the proper physical action to take when an earthquake hits, and government officials and first responders will test and practice emergency procedures.
So maybe you don’t work in California or any other earthquake-prone zones around the world. But if you work in IT, you have to be cognizant of the possibility of disaster, whether it’s a blizzard; a pandemic flu; silly, malicious, or evil acts by other humans or even your fellow IT folks; a 100-year flood; utility brownouts and blackouts, or what author Nassim Nicholas Taleb calls “Black Swans”—that is, events that could happen that you haven’t a clue could happen.
How will your company deal with disaster? Does it have a plan? Numerous resources are out there. I'd like to offer you some advice from our own pros such as David Chernicoff, an IT consultant and Windows IT Pro magazine contributing editor who weathered heavy floods at his Pennsylvania office("Disaster Preparedness Checklist") and Hurricane Ike veteran and Windows IT Pro author, Tony Howlett ("Hurricane Preparedness for IT") who dealt firsthand with disaster preparation and recovery.
At the least, on Thursday at 10 a.m. Pacific time you might well want to revisit your company’s disaster recovery plan, or bring up the Great Southern California ShakeOut and use it to ease into a discussion of what your company would do if caught in circumstances beyond its control.
You must be a registered user or online subscriber to comment on this article. Please log on before posting a comment. Are you a new visitor?
Register now
How Thin-Client Virtual Desktops Can Improve ROI Read this Essential Guide to get a technical overview of VDI and understand what you need to consider when planning for desktop virtualization.
New from Left-Brain.com - Exchange Server 2007 Training Package This intensive, 21-hour training course can easily eliminate up to four years of trial, error, and frustration! You’ll learn how to avoid the costly misconfigurations that even the most seasoned experts make. Find out more!
Improve SharePoint Performance on a WAN Learn how to increase in user-perceived remote performance in SharePoint 2007 while decreasing the load on W front-end servers (WFE).
Get Windows IT Pro To Go & Save 25% The Windows IT Pro Master CD is a powerful combination of content and convenience. Instantly search over 10K solution-driven articles instantly, and get online access to new articles each month at windowsitpro.com. Subscribe today!