Maintaining Application Performance and Continuity in the Face of Natural Disasters
February 01, 2013

Stephen Pierzchala

Share this

Sadly, natural disasters often cause major devastation and wreckage. They can make a business prone to widespread power outages, transportation stoppages, and massive flooding, interrupting day-to-day physical operations and revenue streams. But recent advances in computing – specifically, the advent of Cloud computing – have made today’s data centers and the businesses they support much more resilient.

For example, if the recent Hurricane Sandy had any silver lining, it was this: even as data centers in the northeast took a beating, Cloud service providers and the overall Internet infrastructure remained solid. Compuware’s own Outage Analyzer indicated only a few scattered outages, and major service disruptions were avoided. As a result, many area businesses saw minimal disruption to critical business processes conducted online, including CRM, SCM, content management and accounting, with the worst effects limited to infrastructure and applications located in the worst hit areas of Manhattan.

The distributed nature of the Cloud made this possible by addressing the holy grail of business continuity — eliminating single points of failure. The ability to host data center assets off-premise in remote, distributed data centers can protect data and applications from a disaster, even if it’s a storm system spanning several hundred miles. When it comes to maintaining application performance (speed) and continuity in the face of a major natural disaster — or the constant day-to-day volatility of the Internet for that matter — here are three key takeaways:

1. Use the Cloud for Business Continuity

One of the most understated use cases for the Cloud is business continuity. People often think of the Cloud as a way to save money and gain agility, but the Cloud is also built for back-up and recovery, with geographically dispersed networks.

We expect that many businesses are going to start thinking more seriously about disaster recovery in the Cloud. Many businesses can't afford to put in the redundancy they have in a Cloud solution with an on-premise solution and make it accessible to so many people regardless of their location. If you have two feet of water in your data center, your servers and backup are likely gone; but if you are on one or more Cloud platforms, you can just drive to your local fast-food restaurant or library and be up-and-running.

2. Make Sure Your Chosen Cloud Service Provider Can Perform at the Level You Expect

When you select a Cloud service provider, you should make sure they can support the level of application performance your business requires on a day-to-day basis. Many Cloud service providers offer availability guarantees, but all this means is that their servers are up and running — not necessarily that your application end users are having a fast, high-quality experience.

You should also expect your Cloud service provider to be able to seamlessly move your applications – even without your awareness — in the event of an impending localized disaster. Many Cloud service providers offer standard back-up and disaster recovery services that make continuous access to data and applications for their clients a non-issue.

The extent to which a Cloud service provider is responsible for your back-up and disaster recovery depends on how you are using the Cloud services. If you’re using Cloud services in a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) business model — a mode of software delivery in which software and associated data are centrally hosted on the Cloud — the Cloud service provider bears responsibility for ensuring your apps are redundant.

On the other hand, if you’re using Cloud services in an Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) provision model — meaning you’re “renting” from the Cloud the equipment used to support operations, including storage, hardware, servers and networking components — responsibility for software management (including redundancy) remains with you.

3. Monitor Your Apps, 24x7

Even if you have the most reliable Cloud service provider in the world, there are still network and website components like CDNs, regional and local ISPs and third-party services that can degrade performance at the edge of the Internet. In fact, Compuware recently found that ad servers were the number one culprit when it comes to slowing or bringing down websites, choking the very sites from which they’re trying to generate revenue.

It doesn't take a natural disaster to create the first tear that rips apart other connections. Sometimes just one service getting hammered is all it takes to start a chain reaction that knocks your site off the web. Outages and slow-downs for network and website components can be completely random, and the truth is that the Internet has “little storms” like this all the time, caused by things as mundane as server failures, unplugged cables, backhoe-on-fiber collisions, and dragging fish boat anchors.

This means you need to take responsibility for understanding your own end-user experiences. You must monitor all your applications 24x7, storm or no storm, whether you’re using the Cloud or not. You must understand where your single points of failure are and eliminate them. You never want to get into a spot where your application is failing you, and it’s your customers letting you know.

In summary, regional presence should never determine one’s vulnerability to lost applications and data. Today’s data centers are more virtual than ever, and that’s a major plus in the face of all types of network events — natural disasters and otherwise. To cost-effectively protect your business operations, consider using the Cloud for business continuity; make sure your Cloud service provider meets your day-to-day application performance requirements as well as your back-up and disaster recovery requirements; and realize you are ultimately responsible for managing the performance of all your own applications, around the clock.

Stephen Pierzchala, Technology Strategist, Compuware APM's Center of Excellence.

Related Links:

Compuware Technology Strategist Joins the Vendor Forum

Share this

The Latest

November 21, 2024

Broad proliferation of cloud infrastructure combined with continued support for remote workers is driving increased complexity and visibility challenges for network operations teams, according to new research conducted by Dimensional Research and sponsored by Broadcom ...

November 20, 2024

New research from ServiceNow and ThoughtLab reveals that less than 30% of banks feel their transformation efforts are meeting evolving customer digital needs. Additionally, 52% say they must revamp their strategy to counter competition from outside the sector. Adapting to these challenges isn't just about staying competitive — it's about staying in business ...

November 19, 2024

Leaders in the financial services sector are bullish on AI, with 95% of business and IT decision makers saying that AI is a top C-Suite priority, and 96% of respondents believing it provides their business a competitive advantage, according to Riverbed's Global AI and Digital Experience Survey ...

November 18, 2024

SLOs have long been a staple for DevOps teams to monitor the health of their applications and infrastructure ... Now, as digital trends have shifted, more and more teams are looking to adapt this model for the mobile environment. This, however, is not without its challenges ...

November 14, 2024

Modernizing IT infrastructure has become essential for organizations striving to remain competitive. This modernization extends beyond merely upgrading hardware or software; it involves strategically leveraging new technologies like AI and cloud computing to enhance operational efficiency, increase data accessibility, and improve the end-user experience ...

November 13, 2024

AI sure grew fast in popularity, but are AI apps any good? ... If companies are going to keep integrating AI applications into their tech stack at the rate they are, then they need to be aware of AI's limitations. More importantly, they need to evolve their testing regiment ...

November 12, 2024

If you were lucky, you found out about the massive CrowdStrike/Microsoft outage last July by reading about it over coffee. Those less fortunate were awoken hours earlier by frantic calls from work ... Whether you were directly affected or not, there's an important lesson: all organizations should be conducting in-depth reviews of testing and change management ...

November 08, 2024

In MEAN TIME TO INSIGHT Episode 11, Shamus McGillicuddy, VP of Research, Network Infrastructure and Operations, at EMA discusses Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) ...

November 07, 2024

On average, only 48% of digital initiatives enterprise-wide meet or exceed their business outcome targets according to Gartner's annual global survey of CIOs and technology executives ...

November 06, 2024

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly reshaping industries around the world. From optimizing business processes to unlocking new levels of innovation, AI is a critical driver of success for modern enterprises. As a result, business leaders — from DevOps engineers to CTOs — are under pressure to incorporate AI into their workflows to stay competitive. But the question isn't whether AI should be adopted — it's how ...