RTO, RPO, and recovery tiers
Due to unforeseen disruptive events, the business processes in your organization can face a downtime. It is important to classify your business processes in the recovery tiers and calculate the amount of time and amount of data loss that your organization can handle without significant effect on the operations.
Recovery time objective
Recovery time objective (RTO) is the maximum amount of time a computer, system, network, or application takes to recover after an outage event or data loss without causing much effect to your business operations.
The business users and IT owners can perform business impact analysis and technical impact analysis respectively by responding to the assessment in the BIA component in the BCM UIB Workspace. A sample view of the Assessments tab is shown in the example.
If you are the business user, you can estimate the recovery time objective for your business services and processes by responding to the Recovery time objective assessment in the Assessments tab. The questions are displayed in the Recovery time objective assessment tab according to the configuration set up by BCM administrators. A sample Recovery time objective assessment with demo data is shown in the example.
Recovery point objective
Recovery point objective (RPO) defines the maximum acceptable data loss that a business process can handle without significant effect on operations.
If you are the IT owner, you can estimate the recovery point objective for your data applications and systems by responding to the Recovery point objective assessment in the BIA. Based on the configuration set up by the BCM administrator, the questions are displayed in the Recovery time objective assessment tab as shown in the example.
Recovery tier
With BCM administrator role, classify a set of business applications that follow a similar range of recovery time objective (RTO) values in one type of recovery tier. For example, for the Mission Critical recovery tiers, recovery time objectives can be Immediately, one Hour, and four Hours.
The recovery tiers and their associated recovery time objectives are displayed in the example.
BCM administrators can configure a recovery tier and set its recovery time objective as shown in the example.
Recovery tiers are also associated with other organizational expectations such as levels of support, escalation, and communication.
- BIA scores and impact assessment result
- Element recovery times
- Mission Critical
- Business Critical
- Essential
- Non-essential
- Critical
- Non-Critical
Recovery tier configuration by the administrators
For more information on how to configure a recovery tier in the Business Continuity Management application, see Configure recovery tiers for BIA.
Recovery timeframe
- Immediately
- 1 Hour
- 4 Hours
- 8 Hours
- 24 Hours
- 72 Hours
- 1 Week
- 2 weeks
The example shows the configuration of a recovery timeframe in the Business Continuity Management application.
For more information on how to configure a recovery timeframe in the Business Continuity Management application, see Set up recovery timeframe for a recovery tier.