Online Document Storage = Smarter Business Continuity

Online Document Storage = Smarter Business Continuity

It is never safe to take business-supporting services for granted, yet many business owners today do just that.  Reliance upon Internet connectivity, the dial-tone of the 21st century, has created the potential for a negative cascading effect on infrastructure and the delivery of business services, even in the case of a minor disruption somewhere along the line.   Natural disasters and other occurrences can have a devastating impact on business and personal lives, and it has been proven that organizations with solid plans for reacting to emergency situations have a far greater chance to recover than those without.

Business continuity management describes the recovery of the business or service from outage or disruption, and a solid business continuity plan includes considerations for people as well as systems, because it takes a combination of both and knowing what do to in the event of an emergency.   Businesses with disaster plans will always do better than those without, and training employees how to react swiftly when necessary by bringing backup systems online or relocating to offsite work areas is essential to minimizing downtime and reducing the impact of the outage.  This is where SmartVault’s online document storage and the cloud can make a big difference between success and failure of a business continuity and recovery effort.

One of the first steps in developing a business continuity plan is creating a means to protect business information.  Digital documents and files that reside on local PCs and networks should be protected and archived in a secure central document storage system, allowing for storage and retrieval of documents as well as facilitating collaboration and sharing of information throughout the organization.  Using SmartVault for online document storage gives you a secure online vault for maintaining essential business information.  When a business adopts the SmartVault solution and elects to store business documents and files in the secure SmartVault system, they have implemented a critical first step towards establishing business continuity and disaster recovery capabilities.   Preserving business documents and files in the cloud-based SmartVault solution allows the business to retain access to critical information even in the event of a natural disaster, fire or theft.  Documents are stored safely in the SmartVault system, accessible via any Internet-accessible location, so relocated workers can access what they need when they need it.

SmartVault is an easy-to-use online document storage solution that seamlessly integrates with popular business applications, like Microsoft Outlook and Intuit QuickBooks and QuickBooks Online.  Working with SmartVault is simple and intuitive, so it is easy to apply the solution to handling most business documents and digital information.  When online document storage is fully-integrated into the workflow of the business, it helps ensure that data is consistently captured and stored, reducing the potential for lost documents and increasing the overall capability of the business to continue operations.

Disaster planning means thinking ahead to what could happen, and then taking steps to protect the business in case it does.  SmartVault is one of the applications in the business toolkit that addresses the daily needs of business document and information storage and management.  When disaster strikes (and it will) SmartVault is there and working, helping businesses continue to store, access and share the information they need to keep the business in business. For more on SmartVault’s secure online document storage solution, visit http://www.smartvault.com/features/online-document-storage/

jmbunnyfeet

Make Sense?

J

Reinventing your Business – What Happens When Systems Fail?

Reinventing your Business – What Happens When Systems Fail?

There is a lot of discussion today about how our children are growing up in a world where high technology is simply part of life and lifestyle.  I even read an article about how people are evolving because of the availability of information; evolving to the point where we no longer store and retrieve information, but store information on how to get information.  The article cited an example of someone who couldn’t recall the name of an actress in a movie they had seen, so the immediate response was to search for the answer on Google.  In the past, people relied upon memory, and found various ways to mentally associate and store information so it was able to be recalled.  Now, there’s an app for that.

Are we losing our ability to effectively store and recall information?  Are we forgetting how to do things before we had all this technology to help us?  It makes you wonder sometimes, how technology-dependent we are. We look at the ruins of past civilizations and view seemingly impossible structures, (impossible given what we know about the technology available at the time) and wonder how they came to be.  The knowledge was there at some point, but is now lost.

Is your business at risk from a similar fate?  Maybe it sounds silly, but it makes sense to at least think about it, because there are a lot of companies out there today that are not paying attention to critical issues such as knowledge management and sustainability.  Finding ways to capture business knowledge and protect it is essential in every organization, whether small business or large enterprise.

Small businesses are often centered on an owner who started the operation, and who just knows how things are done.  The primary goal in this situation is to capture that knowledge and turn it into process.   Only through this approach may a business begin to reduce its reliance upon a single individual, and this is a critical step in creating both sustainability and continuity in the business. In larger enterprises, process and structure are essential to keep the various parts and participants moving in the same general direction.

Once those processes are established, generally using technology to support or facilitate them, is that the end of the task?  Many businesses seem to believe so, and move along with the impression that they have things well in hand.  And then a major system or technology failure occurs, and folks are left standing around, unable to get their jobs done.  In the worst cases, there isn’t anyone in the business who really understands how to pull things back together or there is no longer access to electronically stored information necessary to continue operations.  How would you handle things if your systems – your computers and software and systems – were no longer available to you?

While GPS and high-tech auto-pilot systems can bring tremendous efficiencies to the process of flying, they also can give a false sense of security that encourages complacency. If something goes wrong, the auto-pilot will adjust and the computer will tell you where to go, won’t it?

Here is where technology has the ability to distract pilots–and entrepreneurs–from asking themselves if they’re both focused on and capable of solving the right problems.

http://www.inc.com/chris-mittelstaedt/business-lessons-from-air-france-447-crash.html

Each and every business must consider how they would address a severe information technology outage, and should take steps to protect and preserve business knowledge so that there is some hope of recovery from such an event.  In an article on Inc.com (Survival Skills Every Entrepreneur Needs), writer Chris Mittelstaedt makes this observation, and suggests that business owners address how they might get things done “old school”, just in case all this nifty technology fails us unexpectedly.

Make sense?

J