The cloud as an archive cannot be left out of the discussion either. It provides the most incrementally scalable option and for businesses that don't have petabytes of storage to archive it may be the most cost effective option as well. Depending on the cloud storage provider it may also provide a better long term operational efficiency as well, relieving the data center from the data management burden in addition to saving upfront costs.
The second justification for a keep it all forever mentality is the improved ability to move older data to secondary storage. Data archiving software has certainly improved but most interesting is file virtualization products. As we discuss in our article "What is File Virtualization", the ability to seamlessly move data to and from an archive optimized disk repository without constant IT intervention is critical. In a keep everything strategy, policies need to be set broadly and then executed automatically. There may no longer be the time or resources available to manage down at the file level. As the number of regulations increase as well as focused enforcement of those regulations continues, the amount of recovery/discovery requests are going to skyrocket. IT can not afford to nor does it really want to be involved in delivering this data. The transparent recovery that file virtualization provides is key.
In our next entry we will discuss what else has to be in place for a keep it all forever data retention strategy to be successful. We will then conclude this series with a cost justification of a keep everything strategy vs. a strict data elimination strategy.
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George Crump is lead analyst of Storage Switzerland, an IT analyst firm focused on the storage and virtualization segments. Find Storage Switzerland's disclosure statement here.