Teradata
Corporation (NYSE: TDC), the world’s largest company solely focused
on data warehousing and enterprise analytics, today announced that its Teradata
Disaster Recovery Solution reduces the cost and takes the panic out
of disaster recovery.
The solution was designed for chief technology officers who don’t want
the expense and headache of creating an in-house disaster recovery
solution, yet must plan for and survive catastrophic events.
Those businesses without a disaster recovery plan in place are at risk
of business failure, if their company experiences a disaster.
“To keep costs low, Teradata customers can tailor the level of
assistance needed to meet the specific demands of their enterprise, and
also have access to the Teradata Recovery Centers 24 hours a day, 365
days a year,” said Randy Lea, vice president, products and services
marketing, Teradata. “Customers bring knowledge of their data and
applications and Teradata brings the expertise and experience in
disaster recovery. Working together, we can help a customer build a
better and less expensive disaster recovery solution than what they can
build on their own.”
The experienced Teradata team, who conduct multiple simulations monthly,
understands data warehouse best practices. They provide guidance on
developing and updating comprehensive recovery plans, training, and
yearly testing. To simplify the process for chief technology officers,
the Teradata solution offers customers an off-site, dedicated, secured
facility that is complete with equipment, software licenses, and
database administrators experienced in disaster recovery. It includes
all the costs for cooling, powering, and maintaining the data
warehouses. This shared resource business model lowers the cost of
disaster recovery below what customers can achieve on their own, with
their own dedicated servers and staff.
Lea commented that, “Customers have the opportunity to practice their
procedures every year in the Teradata recovery center by simulating a
disaster, whether an extreme disaster or inconvenient interruption. It
is often surprising what customers discover during their practice
sessions - it is better to discover vulnerabilities during testing
rather than during a true disaster. During their yearly test, one
customer found that the addresses of key servers had changed since their
last disaster recovery test, which caused hours of delay in the practice
recovery process. If this had been a real disaster, the incorrect server
addresses could have turned the delay of hours into a delay of days
potentially shutting down the business.