Active Archiving Key Strategy for Accessible, Online Archive Data
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on Thu, August 11th, 2011
Aberdeen Group research available from Active Archive Alliance
The Active Archive Alliance announced the availability of a new research study that finds that best-in-class organizations are deploying active archives to keep ever growing data sets online, indexed and accessible without the costs and resources associated with primary storage.
The study detailed in the July 2011 Aberdeen Group research report, Archive Agility: Building Business Resilience through Active Archiving, shows that organizations today recognize the knowledge and business value of archived information and the importance of keeping it accessible. The report details how technology leaders are solving data management and accessibility concerns for Big Data, cloud and archive data by leveraging active archiving solutions.
The study identified the following top four pressures
that are driving organizations to archive data:
The Aberdeen report is based on a survey of a diverse group of 113 end user organizations. The report distinguished 'Best-in-Class' from 'Industry Average' and 'Laggard' organizations in archiving practices based on the amount of time to recover an archive file, the number of business interruptions in the last 12 months and lastly, the longest period of time of a business interruption in the last 12 months.
The research brief revealed that the best-in-class companies were adept at managing archived data, as they reported their archives to be just 50 percent larger than their primary storage capacity. Furthermore, even though the size of their archives outranked other organizations in terms of overall bytes, their end-users could access archived files the fastest.
According to the report, organizations enjoying best-in-class archiving performance shared several common characteristics, including:
The study detailed in the July 2011 Aberdeen Group research report, Archive Agility: Building Business Resilience through Active Archiving, shows that organizations today recognize the knowledge and business value of archived information and the importance of keeping it accessible. The report details how technology leaders are solving data management and accessibility concerns for Big Data, cloud and archive data by leveraging active archiving solutions.
The study identified the following top four pressures
that are driving organizations to archive data:
- Too much historical information and data growth
- Cost to keep data active and accessible
- Takes too long for end users to gain access to historical data
- Rising cost of managing litigation and compliance
The Aberdeen report is based on a survey of a diverse group of 113 end user organizations. The report distinguished 'Best-in-Class' from 'Industry Average' and 'Laggard' organizations in archiving practices based on the amount of time to recover an archive file, the number of business interruptions in the last 12 months and lastly, the longest period of time of a business interruption in the last 12 months.
The research brief revealed that the best-in-class companies were adept at managing archived data, as they reported their archives to be just 50 percent larger than their primary storage capacity. Furthermore, even though the size of their archives outranked other organizations in terms of overall bytes, their end-users could access archived files the fastest.
According to the report, organizations enjoying best-in-class archiving performance shared several common characteristics, including:
- 75 percent have deployed archive management software
- 70 percent have IT trained in new archiving tools
- 58 percent utilize open archive standards
- 45 percent have a formal process to ensure redundant data is not archived
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