|
Disaster Recovery
Document
Disaster Recovery
Document control is as important to some organizations as the
databases themselves. In a recent article, a California
public law firm with 52 attorneys, has had a specific and a general
content problem, both of which were recently addressed with
e-business software packages.
Disaster Recovery
Document control – law firms
Law firms are
obligated to retain certain documents for anywhere from eight to
ninety-nine years. Historically, the “company” has relied on file
folders for document retention, but it's an increasingly outdated
approach. With so much riding on the location of documents,
organizations can not to take a chance with paper.
Document management
got them thinking about another issue, one that has come to the fore
in the previous year: disaster recovery. They started talking about
retaining data. This was the catalyst that then pushed them to
thinking about the wider issues of Disaster recovery. This is a good
time to start thinking about some of the areas of DR planning that
you perhaps, have not thought of before.
Disaster Recovery
Document control – everyone’s problem
Disaster recovery is
an issue that has the attention of boardrooms and IT alike. In the
worst case, if the building is wiped out, what happens to my
business?
Where's my
intellectual knowledge? How do I rebuild the company, get everything
back up and running?
After September 11th,
'What if?' is on everyone's mind.
Explore the Disaster Recovery
Toolkit
Contains 18 ready to use templates for successful
Disaster Recovery Planning / IT Service Continuity
Management
|