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Episode 68 — Design Disaster Recovery That Works: Roles, Documentation, and Readiness Practices

Episode 68 — Design Disaster Recovery That Works: Roles, Documentation, and Readiness Practices

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This episode teaches disaster recovery as a readiness program with clear roles and repeatable execution, because DS0-001 scenarios often reveal that the technology exists but the organization cannot use it under pressure. You’ll learn how to define roles and responsibilities before an incident, including who declares a disaster, who executes failover, who validates data integrity, who communicates status, and who approves restoration steps that may involve data loss tradeoffs. Documentation will be framed as operational infrastructure, meaning runbooks must include prerequisites, exact commands or workflows, access requirements, and verification steps, and they must be maintained as systems evolve. Readiness practices will include cadence-based testing, tabletop exercises that reveal missing dependencies like DNS updates or certificate rotation, and rehearsed validation steps that confirm applications can reconnect and critical data is consistent. Scenario examples will include a regional outage where teams cannot access required credentials, a DR plan that fails because monitoring and alerting were not included in the secondary site, and a recovery effort that stalls because decision authority for RPO tradeoffs was never defined. By the end, you should be able to recommend DR improvements that are practical, testable, and aligned with business objectives rather than purely architectural diagrams. Produced by BareMetalCyber.com, where you’ll find more cyber audio courses, books, and information to strengthen your educational path. Also, if you want to stay up to date with the latest news, visit DailyCyber.News for a newsletter you can use, and a daily podcast you can commute with.

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