How to Prevent Orphaned Data During Work Force Turnover (
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Facing tough economic choices, businesses across America have collectively laid off hundreds of thousands of employees lately. But without the proper preventative measures in place, important business data could have been lost or left behind on a variety of distributed devices. Here, Knowledge Center contributor Chris Winter explains how to identify your company's exposure to potentially orphaned data, as well as how to deploy centrally managed solutions that allow for reliable, flexible and easy data recovery.
Within
the last six months alone, hundreds of thousands of employees have been
laid off from their jobs. Each one of those departing workers may have
left behind important business data, applications or intellectual
propertyorphaned on desktops, remote workstations, mobile laptops or
PDAs. Legacy backup approaches are not enough. The following are some
important steps businesses should take to safeguard against orphaned
data.
First, businesses should take steps to identify and locate all
potentially orphaned data on distributed devices. Second, they should
establish a comprehensive backup policy for that data. Third,
businesses should establish centralized control over enforcing that
policy. Finally, technology should be deployed that is able to
reliably, flexibly and easily recover that data under any circumstances.
Let's take a detailed look at all of these steps:
Step No. 1: Identify potentially orphaned data
Over half of all business data now resides on laptops and other
distributed devices. These devices are often in transit or located at
the edge of your network or beyond. They are at distant offices,
partner sites or employees' homes and not under the constant watch or
control of IT. Even in the best circumstances, data can be orphaned if
these devices are lost, stolen, broken, corrupted or simply never
backed up. During work force turnover, even if IT manages to get
distributed devices back, disk drives are often pulled, stacked on a
shelf or left in a drawer forgotten, reformatted or recycled.
Before any work force turnover takes placeand while it's still not
too late to set up an adequate recovery processIT should establish an
inventory of distributed devices that likely contain mission-critical
data and applications. Defining an inventory of distributed devices can
help identify potentially orphaned data and ensure that data is
regularly and thoroughly backed up.
Step No. 2: Establish comprehensive policy
Businesses with legacy tape or CD-ROM systems are often lucky to
capture a reliable backup of their central server once a night. If they
are really lucky, they might also back up shared folders from networked
desktops that are actively connected to the server at that time. But
even then, restoring the data is difficult and sometimes impossible.
Nightly backups are inadequate for retaining minute-by-minute
transactional data. And versions of any business-critical file should
be retained every time it gets updated. Worse still, remote laptops and
other mobile devices usually only make contact with a central server
sporadically (and not during backups scheduled in the middle of the
night), so data residing on these distributed devices frequently fail
to get included in collective batch backups on legacy systems.
Any effective policy to prevent orphaned data should require
continual, multi-versioned backups whenever distributed, remote or
mobile devices are connected to the networkeven over dial-up or VPN
connections.
Step No. 3: Centralize enforceable controls
For too many companies large and small, the policy for centralized
backup control is like a faded note on the back door saying, "Remember
to back up your PC files to the network before you go home." A business
owner might assume that data will be manually backed up at the end of
the workday by a certain employee. But that employee, instead, actually
intends to rush off to pick up the kids at soccer practice.
Backups are the responsibility of IT and should not be allowed to
fail just because a user forgets or ignores the need to transfer files
manually. To centralize control back into the hands of IT management,
backups should be driven by established IT policy. IT should use
technology that enforces backups to run automatically and
transparently, without relying on the actions of individual device
users.