IT Business Continuity: The Top Reasons For Email Outages
Summary: Email has become the most pervasive form of business communication, impacting every aspect of every organization: communications between management, employees, prospects, customers, vendors, suppliers, partners, investors, and analysts.
The average email user sends emails and receives emails every day, and overall email use is growing % per year. Despite large enterprise investments in replication, mirroring, and tape back up systems, email systems continue to fail...
Email Continuity, Business Continuity, Disaster Recovery, Email Managed Services
Article Body: Email has become the most pervasive form of business communication, impacting every aspect of every organization: communications between management, employees, prospects, customers, vendors, suppliers, partners, investors, and analysts.
The average email user sends emails and receives emails every day, and overall email use is growing % per year. Despite large enterprise investments in replication, mirroring, and tape back up systems, email systems continue to fail. While it is widely known that natural and man-made disasters can lead to email outages, new data shows that email systems are more frequently brought down by technological failures.
MessageOne, a leading provider of email continuity solutions, commissioned this research report to understand the frequency, severity, and cause of email outages in North American corporations using Microsoft Exchange or Lotus Notes. This research shows that enterprise email systems are prone to a variety of potential breakdowns including SAN (Storage Area Network) failures, improper configuration, losses in network access, database corruption, and viruses. Data from the survey shows that in any given -month time period, there is a % likelihood of an unplanned email outage and a % likelihood of a planned email outage for any given company.
MessageOne recently surveyed its customers -- hundreds of companies serving over ,, email users -- on email outages during a recent week period. This report analyzes the leading causes of failure with enterprise email systems.
Email Outage Frequency & Duration
Survey results show that in any given -month time period, there is a % likelihood of an unplanned email outage and a % likelihood of a planned email outage in any given company. The length of email outages in the companies surveyed ranged from a minimum of minutes to a maximum of hours with the average email outage being . hours long.
Responses on Email Outages:
% of outages between and hours in duration % of outages between and hours % of outages lasted more than hours % of outages were between and hours
Causes of Unplanned E-mail Outages
A large majority of email outages were caused by unplanned events, most of which were due to technological failures.
Reasons for Technological Failures:
% were due to server hardware failures, averaging . hours in outage duration, % were due to connectivity losses, averaging . hours, % were due to SAN failures averaging . hours, and % were due to database corruption averaging . hours in duration.
The majority of these, specifically database corruption and SAN failures, are troubling because they are the most difficult to prevent. Even with expensive mirroring and replication backup solutions, data corruption and SAN failures are often propagated to the mirror or replicated backup server. These failures usually result in long outages as companies resort to incremental tape backups to locate the last backup before the corruption occurred.
Note: While natural disasters accounted for only % of unplanned email outages, the average downtime due to such disasters was over hours, meaning these can lead to significant impact on businesses.
Conclusions: Despite Heavy Investment, Email Still Fails
Every day, more and more companies are concluding that email is a mission-critical application worthy of inclusion in a business continuity plan.
Email continuity plans need to be developed that take into account the shortcomings of tape backup and replication/mirroring systems. Solutions should then be deployed that limit dependency on these types of technology and can reduce downtime during any outage. You can learn more about email continuity, email management systems, IT disaster planning and recovery, and business continuity planning.
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