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By the Editor of Hosting Journalist April 22, 2021
While improvements have been made with technology and better management of availability, outages remain a major industry, customer, and regulatory concern, stated Uptime Institute in its 3rd Annual Outage Analysis report. The report also shows that the overall impact and direct and indirect cost of outages continue to grow.
COVID-19 was a huge influence in 2020. Although there were significant disruptions affecting financial trading, government services, internet and telecom, the outages that made headlines in 2020 were often about the impact to consumers and workers at home, with interruptions to applications such as Microsoft Exchange and Teams, Zoom, fitness trackers and the like.
“Because of the disruption and high costs that result from disrupted IT services, identifying and analyzing the root causes of failures is a critical step in avoiding more expensive problems,” said Andy Lawrence, executive director of research, Uptime Institute.
The costs of data center outages are often high. When asked about their most recent significant data center outage, over half of the respondents to Uptime Institute’s 2020 Global Survey of Data Center and IT Managers who reported a data center outage in the past three years estimated its cost at more than $100,000 – of which almost a third reported costs of $1 million or above.
“Resiliency remains near the top of management priorities when delivering business services,” said Andy Lawrence, executive director of research, Uptime Institute. “Overall, the causes of outages are changing, software and IT configuration issues are becoming more common, while power issues are now less likely to cause a major IT service outage. The fact is, outages remain common and justify the increased concern and investment in preventing them. Because of the disruption and high costs that result from disrupted IT services, identifying and analyzing the root causes of failures is a critical step in avoiding more expensive problems.”
The Human Factor
Humans would often play a role in data center outages, but the exact nature of the failings can be difficult to pinpoint. In Uptime’s 2020 annual survey, 75% of respondents who had an outage in the last three years said their most recent significant downtime incident would have been preventable with better management or processes.
In Uptime Institute’s 2021 data center resiliency survey, 42% of respondents said they had experienced a data center outage in the last three years due to human error. Among those, 57% cited data center staff execution (e.g., failure to follow procedure) and 44%, incorrect staff processes/procedures, as root causes. From the research, it is clear that a better focus on management and training will produce better service delivery performance.
Other findings of Uptime Institute’s 3rd Annual Outage Analysis report include:
Almost half (44%) of data center operators surveyed think that concern about resiliency of data center/mission-critical IT has increased in the past twelve months.
Three-quarters of data center operators/enterprise IT managers said they have experienced an IT service outage in the past three years. Three in ten said they had experienced an outage that had ‘significant impact.’
Serious and severe outages are less common (one in six reported having one in the past three years) but can have catastrophic results for stakeholders. Vigilance and investment would be necessary.
More than half (56%) of all organizations using a third-party data service have experienced a moderate or serious IT service outage in the last three years that was itself caused by the provider.
Networking and configuration issues are emerging as two of the more common causes of service degradation while power outages are becoming somewhat less of an issue – historically, caused by failures in UPSs, transfer switches and generators.
Source: https://hostingjournalist.com/
Comments
I agree that a lot of data outages are preventable with better management or processes. Maybe more investment should be made into making people become better managers of their data.