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For those who make it to the top of the IT ladder, the pay can be
great. But most IT executives
are losing ground as a result of
the economic recession,
according to the 2009 IT Salary
Survey that we have just
released.
The study shows that the the
mean compensation for CIOs in
large enterprises is now
$168,839, a 6.11% decrease from
a similar study it issued a year
ago. In midsize organizations,
the current average is $163,211,
a drop-off of nearly 5%, said
Janco, which cited reductions in
bonuses and fringe benefits for
the compensation declines.
Read on.... |
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IN THIS ISSUE |
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Pandemic Disaster & Business
Continuity Planning |
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Users Demand 24 x 7 Availability |
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Vista Flops - User Acceptance
Low After 23 Months |
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Pandemic Disaster and Business
Continuity Planning
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Pandemic is an epidemic (a
sudden outbreak) that becomes
very widespread and affects a
whole region, a continent, or
the world. By contrast:
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An
epidemic affects
more than the expected
number of cases of disease
occurring in a community or
region during a given period
of time. A sudden severe
outbreak within a region or
a group as, for example,
AIDS in Africa or AIDS in
intravenous drug users.
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An
endemic is
present in a community at
all times but in low
frequency. An endemic is
continuous as in the case of
malaria in some areas of the
world or as with illicit
drugs in some neighborhoods.
In disaster planning when a
pandemic occurs the data center
exists but people will be in
separate locations. The
Disaster Planning and Business
Continuity Planning processes
need to make the user and
business operating experience as
similar as possible so that the
work environment is the same in
the remote site (often home) as
in the office. A Key
requirement is to increase
remote access capabilities in
addition before the pandemic
occurs the following planning
needs to take place:
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Define
necessary staff levels for
critical business processes
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Identify who
can work remotely and who
has to be in the office
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Validation of
vaccinations for key staff
members
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Identify the
lights out processing issues
for computer operations
staff
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Identify the
network and remote access
capacity requirements - what
percent of workers do you
need to be on the system for
the enterprise to continue
to operate
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Train and test
of users and IT staffs in
how to operate from remote
locations
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Require key employees to
work from remote site at
least once a month
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Validate broadband
capacity to remote sites
(home users)
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Have copies of disaster
plan available in remote
site
· Put in place process for the synchronization of OS system patches
and VPN updates - if the
workstations are not used
frequently disable the auto
update features for security
updates but maintain a process
to see that they workstations
are up-to-date.
Define specific requirements for
security and PCI-DSS when the
disaster plan is activated for a
pandemic.
Define change management and
version control processes to be
used and how they will be
controlled during the pandemic.
Once the disaster plan has been
activated for a pandemic a
central source for information
on who is infected, immune, and
unavailable needs to be
developed and maintained
accurately. In addition, staff
members who are working in the
office and data center
environments should be isolated
if at all possible so they do
not become infected. This may
require a quarantine of these
employees based on the severity
of the pandemic.
Read On...
Order Disaster - Business
Continuity Planning Template... |
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Users Demand 24 x 7 Availability |
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Users
demand 24 x 7 IT service
availability via web sites,
portals, email, and mission
critical applications. When
these systems and applications
are not there or are operating
in a degraded mode, it
negatively impacts the
reputation and revenue of an
enterprise. Maintaining
availability and preventing
downtime begins with the
successful deployment of network
and system management solutions
that are focused on IT Service
Management in a Service-Oriented
architecture.
When managing the help/service
desk in an IT Service Management
environment (ITSM) with
Service-Oriented Architecture
(SOA), there are four (4) things
that you need to do. They are:
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Validate that you have
implemented service tools
versus having added
unnecessary overhead and
bureaucracy. Evaluate your
policies, procedures, and
processes from the user
perspective. To be a service
desk, you must serve your
clients, rather than make
them change what they do to
meet your needs.
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Survey your users often and
understand what they do not
like Review the comments and
listen to critics with an
eye improving what you are
doing. When a change is
implemented go back to the
critics and see if you have
improved.
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Implement metrics and track
performance over time Use
metrics that apply to your
users, see what the trends
are overtime. In addition,
use the same metrics to see
how your competition is
doing. Determine if you are
providing world class
service or just average
service.
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Determine the cost of a
service solution and its ROI
before you implement it
measure achievement. Be
professional in implementing
changes to your help/service
desk. If you are constantly
changing the process you
will not know if your
changes are having the right
impact.
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Encourage input from your
users Listen to your users,
validate that the problem
that you are solving is the
one the user want solved.
Listen to your clients. Tell
them what you heard them
tell you and what your
action steps will be. After
you implement the solution
confirm with them what you
did and how it worked.
Read on...
Order IT Service Management
Template $699 to $1,699
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Vista Flops - User Acceptance Low
After 23 Months |
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Vista continues to have a slow
acceptance and trails the
acceptance that Windows XP had
in the same comparable period.
You can order the full white by
going to
http://www.e-janco.com/session/add_product.aspx?catalog=71
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