Strategic Disaster Recovery
Published 10/2024
MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 2.94 GB | Duration: 2h 0m
Disaster recovery plan, disaster recovery technique, How to make a disaster plan for your family etc.
What you'll learn
Disaster recovery plan
Disaster recovery technique
Cloud disaster recovery technique
Key components of an IT disaster recovery plan
How to create a business continuity plan
How to make a disaster plan for your family
Top elements of an effective disaster recovery plan
Requirements
Desire to learn more about disaster recovery
Knowledge about computer
Description
Disaster recovery plan is a recorded policy and/or process that is designed to assist an organization in executing recovery processes in response to a disaster to protect business IT infrastructure and more generally promote recovery. The purpose of a disaster recovery plan is to comprehensively explain the consistent actions that must taken before, during and after a natural or man-made disaster so that the entire team can take those actions. A disaster recovery plan should address both man-made disasters that are intentional such as fallout from terrorism or hacking or accidental such as an equipment failure. Organizations of all sizes generate and manage massive amounts of data, much of it mission critical. The impact of corruption or data loss from human error, hardware failure malware, or hacking can be substantial. Therefore, it is essential to create a disaster recovery plan for the restoration of business data from a date backup image. A statement of goals will outline what the organization wants to achieve during or after a disaster, including the recovery time objective ( RTO) and the recovery point objective ( RPO). The recovery point objective refers to how much data the company is willing to lose after a disaster occurs. For example, an RPO might be to lose no more than one hour of data, which means data backups must occur at least every hour to meet this objective. Recovery time objective or RTO refers to the acceptable downtime after an outage before business processes and systems must be restored to operation.
Overview
Section 1: Introduction
Lecture 1 Introduction
Lecture 2 What is a disaster recovery
Lecture 3 What are the types of disaster recovery
Lecture 4 How to build a disaster recovery team
Lecture 5 Top elements of an effective disaster recovery plan
Lecture 6 Benefits of disaster recovery
Section 2: Disaster Recovery Plan
Lecture 7 What is a disaster recovery plan
Lecture 8 What should a disaster recovery plan include?
Lecture 9 Benefits of a disaster recovery plan
Lecture 10 Ways to develop a disaster recovery plan
Lecture 11 RPO versus RTO
Lecture 12 Strategies and tools for a disaster recovery plan
Section 3: Disaster Recovery Techniques
Lecture 13 Synchronous replication
Lecture 14 Asynchronous replication
Lecture 15 Mixed technique
Section 4: How To Make A Disaster Plan For Your Family
Lecture 16 General strategies to making a disaster
Lecture 17 Making a family fire escape plan
Lecture 18 Making a family flood plan
Section 5: How To Create A Business Continuity Plan
Lecture 19 Understanding what makes a good business continuity plan
Lecture 20 Determining key recovery resources
Lecture 21 Creating your business continuity plan
Lecture 22 Implementing your business continuity plan
Section 6: Important Areas To consider In Disaster Recovering Plan
Lecture 23 Cloud disaster recovery techniques
Lecture 24 Key components of an IT disaster recovery plan
Section 7: Conclusion
Lecture 25 How to help during a natural disaster
IT professionals, business managers, consultants, employees, companies, corporations, CEO, directors, cyber professionals
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