Network system failure is no fun for any business, but it can be especially painful for major airlines. The outage that hit Southwest Airlines on July 20 2016 is a case in point. The disaster caused the cancelation or delay of more than 2,000 flights. The estimated price tag o is pegged between $54 and $82 million in increased costs and lost revenue — and that does not take into account the PR nightmare and loss of goodwill. Worst of all, the disaster could have been avoided had the airline taken crucial precautionary action.
Faulty Router
Southwest is blaming a faulty router, which it says prompted a widespread network system failure; a technology crash pegged as the worst in the airline’s history. The reservation system was knocked offline, planes were grounded across the nation, and the outage took four full days to resolve.
Fallout included:
- $25 million: Missed bookings, canceled flights, refunded tickets, vouchers
- $57 million: Worker overtime, stranded traveler and crew expenses that include meals and hotels
- Customer dissatisfaction and loss of trust
- Employee headaches and loss of faith
- Southwest Airlines Pilot Association disgusted enough to demand the ousting of Southwest CEO Gary Kelly and COO Mike Van de Ven
The Solution
A major complaint from the pilot association and mechanics union was the airline’s spending too much of its record-breaking profits on buying back shares and not enough on updating technology. And technology is exactly where the solution lies, specifically with DRaaS, or disaster recovery as a service.
While your company may not be on the same scale as Southwest Airlines, an outage within your enterprise would be equally crippling and expensive to daily operations. Companies that invest in DRaaS can enjoy the industry leading Veeam Backup and Replication solution that delivers powerful, affordable and easy-to-use data protection for Hyper-V and VMware. Benefits include rapid image-based backups, integrated offsite replication of images to secure data centers, flexible and fast recoveries, tested, zero point RTO – and protection against disasters such as the one suffered by Southwest.
Are your customers, employees and peace of mind worth the investment? Protect your company with Global Data Vault.
Latest Posts
Cybersecurity Guide for Cloud Data Management
When considering security for information technology resources and systems, companies face many challenges. Not only must companies protect edge-facing (those that provide access to networks outside of an internal network) and core-facing infrastructure technologies,...
The Evil Corporation Behind WastedLocker
WastedLocker malware is a new variant of ransomware developed by a Russian-based company formed to commit cybercrimes. Aptly named “Evil Corp,” the company began malware attacks in 2007, initially focusing on banks and became famous for Dridex, which led to sanctions...
Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery
With many businesses, there’s a natural lull in activity during predictable times of the year. Many companies slow down toward the end of the year, or as budget and sales cycles turn over. This is usually the time when the focus shifts to the less urgent tasks, such...
What is an RTO? RPO?
The first step of any backup and disaster recovery plan will be to establish the amount of recoverable information that is essential to your business success. These two factors, RTO (recovery time objectives) and RPO (recovery point objectives) will set the stage for...

0 Comments