How To Protect Your Home Office and Business Against Disasters

Disaster Recovery Isn't Just for Big Companies; Small Business Owners Need Protection, Too

By Kate J. Chase, published Nov 10, 2005
Published Content: 158  Total Views: 317,483  Favorited By: 2 CPs
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Recent big and bad storms like Hurricanes Katrina and Rita have taught many a tough lesson in how quickly we can lose everything we have in the blink of an eye. Along with homes, vehicles, and prized personal possessions, those who work at home risk losing their very ability to do business. Then, trying to get back to work becomes a bigger nightmare when you also have to struggle to find temporary accommodations.

Yet there are steps you can take to make it possible for you to get back to business so you can earn the next paycheck you desperately need. If you spend even just a few hours each month to make copies of important material and other prep tasks, you may be well prepared enough to set up shop again from just about anywhere, including a family member's home or a hotel or motel.

Do full system backups of your computer on a regular basis. Do this at least once a week. You can use this backup to restore the contents of your hard disk to a new computer, if needed. If at all possible, consider storing backup copies at a remote location on a regular basis. You can mail a recorded CD or DVD once a week to a trusted friend or family member, store them in a safe deposit box in a nearby town, or some other avenue that lets you keep a copy away from your physical office.

If you keep all records of your clients, customers, vendors, distributors, and others you do business with strictly on your computer, you want to make at least one hard copy of this information and update the copy regularly, to reflect new additions or remove no longer live accounts. Keep a copy of this with your portable computer, if you have one.

If you have a notebook or tablet computer, have it in good working order and set up with all the programs you need to run your business. For example, if you use QuickBooks to do your accounting, Microsoft Word to prepare documents, and DreamWeaver to manage a small business Web site, have those applications installed on the portable system. When you make backups of your computer drive contents, make an extra copy that you can slip into your portable computer carrying case.

Takeaways
  • Regular backups of your computer files is a critical recovery step.
  • Keep an emergency kit with all you need, ready to grab at a moment's notice
  • Have hard copies of your customer/contract contacts and account details.
Did You Know?
Did you know that the majority of small businesses affected by a disaster never reopen?
Resources
  • "PC Disaster Recovery", Sybex, 2002
Comments
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I am printing a copy of this & taking it into my office where my boss keeps creating disasters. more stuff like this, pretty please

Posted on 11/27/2005 at 9:11:00 PM

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