@Prabh Nair Did you create the second part for DRP yet? Would like to see that too. Tank you very much for your efforts, the videos are so good and they are helping so many CISSP aspirants.
Hi @prabh For question at 13:23 , shouldnt RTO be what official is willing to accept and MTD be what is the maximum time system resource can remain unavailable? Can you please clarify.
Hi Prabh, in question "What is the ultimate goal of RTO" how we are eliminating option C("MTO is higher than RTO). From net MTO (Maximum Tolerable Outage) is the maximum amount of time that a process or facility can be unavailable before significant disruption and/or financial loss occurs to an organisation. RTO (Recovery Time Objective) is the organisation’s goal for getting back to a normal situation in the event of an outage. In DR planning, RTO is normally less than MTO. kindly provide your advice
Option C - MTO/MTD to be higher than RTO is a valid point, but not the ultimate goal. When determining the Priorities in BIA, we take 3 factors of time into consideration. 1. RTO - Recovery Time Objective; 2. WRT-Work Recovery Time; 3. MTD - Maximum Tolerable Downtime: RTO is the amount of time or maximum amount of time, within which the system to be recovered. WRT is the time required by the team to validate if the recovery has happened properly to the best-known state. MTD is the maximum amount of time, beyond which the company or the entity, would go out of business/unrecoverable damage. The ultimate goal of BCP is to ensure the continuity of the business, which is closely related to MTD. In theory or in real world RTO comes first and then WRT sequentially. Ideally the goal is to ensure that the combined time of RTO & WRT should be less than MTD => MTD > (RTO+WRT). If it goes beyond MTD then the business will go for unrecoverable damage, which is what BCP trying to prevent. Hope this answers your question.
When preparing a Disaster Recovery (DR) Plan, all organizational functions and the technology supporting them need to be classified based on: C. Business Priority Explanation: Business Priority refers to the criticality of each function to the organization's overall mission and objectives. Functions and supporting technologies are prioritized based on their importance to the business, ensuring that the most critical systems are restored first during a disaster. This classification helps in determining the order of recovery and resource allocation to minimize business impact. Other Options: A. Recovery Priority: While recovery priority is important, it is determined after assessing the business priority. B. Monetary Priority: While cost considerations are important, they do not solely determine the order of recovery for business functions. D. Function Priority: This is somewhat redundant; however, business priority specifically aligns recovery efforts with the organization's critical business objectives.
Hey Prabh - this was very, very helpful. However, I wonder if you'd attach a cheat sheet to summarize the differences/similarities between the terms. For example in one of the coffee shots you said RTO = must ensure MTD is not exceeded. I'd be curious how you'd summarize the others. I often struggle with the terms for BCP and DR
The best thing you can someone is knowledge and thank for this gift.
#beliveprabh thanks you
Great video for BCP concepts
Excellent and well explained
Good perspective on covering the topics from the questions. Thanks Prabh.
#beliveprabh thanks you
Excellent share
Thank you so much Sir, I request you to please keep sharing such videos
#beliveprabh thanks you
very useful info
Prabh you r superb... thanks
Very helpful
Excellent job
#beliveprabh thanks you
Nice one ..
@Prabh Nair Did you create the second part for DRP yet? Would like to see that too. Tank you very much for your efforts, the videos are so good and they are helping so many CISSP aspirants.
Hye Prabh..absolute gold your videos are..really appreciate this champ.just curious the DR video can you please post the link to thtat ?
Hi @prabh
For question at 13:23 , shouldnt RTO be what official is willing to accept and MTD be what is the maximum time system resource can remain unavailable?
Can you please clarify.
Hi Prabh, in question "What is the ultimate goal of RTO" how we are eliminating option C("MTO is higher than RTO). From net MTO (Maximum Tolerable Outage) is the maximum amount of time that a process or facility can be unavailable before significant disruption and/or financial loss occurs to an organisation. RTO (Recovery Time Objective) is the organisation’s goal for getting back to a normal situation in the event of an outage. In DR planning, RTO is normally less than MTO.
kindly provide your advice
I do have the same doubt. Prabh Can you help us here...!!
Option C - MTO/MTD to be higher than RTO is a valid point, but not the ultimate goal. When determining the Priorities in BIA, we take 3 factors of time into consideration. 1. RTO - Recovery Time Objective; 2. WRT-Work Recovery Time; 3. MTD - Maximum Tolerable Downtime: RTO is the amount of time or maximum amount of time, within which the system to be recovered. WRT is the time required by the team to validate if the recovery has happened properly to the best-known state. MTD is the maximum amount of time, beyond which the company or the entity, would go out of business/unrecoverable damage. The ultimate goal of BCP is to ensure the continuity of the business, which is closely related to MTD. In theory or in real world RTO comes first and then WRT sequentially. Ideally the goal is to ensure that the combined time of RTO & WRT should be less than MTD => MTD > (RTO+WRT). If it goes beyond MTD then the business will go for unrecoverable damage, which is what BCP trying to prevent. Hope this answers your question.
When preparing a Disaster Recovery (DR) Plan, all organizational functions and the technology supporting them need to be classified based on:
C. Business Priority
Explanation:
Business Priority refers to the criticality of each function to the organization's overall mission and objectives. Functions and supporting technologies are prioritized based on their importance to the business, ensuring that the most critical systems are restored first during a disaster. This classification helps in determining the order of recovery and resource allocation to minimize business impact.
Other Options:
A. Recovery Priority: While recovery priority is important, it is determined after assessing the business priority.
B. Monetary Priority: While cost considerations are important, they do not solely determine the order of recovery for business functions.
D. Function Priority: This is somewhat redundant; however, business priority specifically aligns recovery efforts with the organization's critical business objectives.
Nice Video
#beliveprabh thanks you
Thanks
✌
@Prabh, Have you made any other session for BCP/DR ?
Hi Prabh, do we have the second part if this series , ie DRP video. Thank You!!
Bia is subpart of risk assessment or vice versa ????
Vivek risk assessment is process which is part of all major proces
Like for incident management or patch or bia
Love u prabh... I like ur vedios very much... U r giving such a awesome videos to us...
@@VivekSingh-me5bj bhai rulayega kya :)
Hey Prabh - this was very, very helpful. However, I wonder if you'd attach a cheat sheet to summarize the differences/similarities between the terms. For example in one of the coffee shots you said RTO = must ensure MTD is not exceeded. I'd be curious how you'd summarize the others. I often struggle with the terms for BCP and DR
Good bcp plan is the one where rto must not exceed mtd
Bcoz mtd is risk capacity for an organization
Can you do video about change management from scratch.
Thanks in advance!
Sure #beliveprabh thanks you
The answer for the question 'true statement for MTD' should be c. Bcz MTD states about that time when recovery may not be possible
Prabh, will you please do BIA in detail? The last coffee shot is so unclear :(
Hi Prabh, how can I get your full CISSP course please?
Last question was 'last step ' right?
no develop recovory priorities