Strategic Outlook

  1. Enterprise Media Streaming Set for Growth
  2. Guideline Setting Key to Effective Telework Programs
  3. Draw the Line Between Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity
  4. The 411 on the 2.0: Web Marketing for the Small Enterprise
  5. Three Rules of Utility Infrastructure Investment

Industry Insights

  1. Planning a Takeover? Integrate Systems Post Haste!
  2. SharePoint in Professional Services: A Case Study
  3. Campus Alert Systems Critical to Student Safety

Analyst's Angle

  1. Nobody Gets Fired for Buying Cisco

In-Depth Report

A Method for IT Portfolio ManagementA Method for IT Portfolio Management

The promise of IT portfolio management is the quantification of IT efforts, enabling measurement and objective evaluation of IT investments and alignment with business strategy. Understand how IT portfolio management can be a driver of IT process improvement and governance alike.

Draw the Line Between Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity

McLean Report: Research Note

Published: April 22, 2008


Disaster recovery planning (DRP) is often seen as the IT equivalent of a high-cost insurance policy that may never be redeemed, so making the business case for a DRP is difficult at the best of times. Given that the economy’s outlook for 2008/2009 is gloomy, IT departments everywhere will be asked to cut or postpone projects until the downturn reverses. For IT departments still moving ahead with DRP projects, knowing when to defer business continuity planning (BCP) will keep the DR work on budget and on track.

DRP vs. BCP: Who Owns What?

Info-Tech fields many queries from clients asking who is responsible for continuity and recovery. Strictly speaking, best practices dictate that IT is accountable for DRP, while the business at large assumes responsibility for BCP. Confusion over ownership arises when neither IT nor the business understand what DRP and BCP actually are, nor where the differences lie between the two.

This article is available in full to members of McLean Report.
Already a member? Please log in.

Username:

Password:

Remember me:

I forgot my password.

E-mail address:

 

I am not a McLean Report member, but...
  • I would like to become a member (starting at $495/yr).
  • I would like to learn more.