Resilient Behaviour
AI Generated by Microsoft

Resilient Behaviour

Friday’s Crowdstrike interrupted my first calm Nordic summer. I had been expecting to capitalise on the slowdown to sharpen my thoughts on tech strategy and plans for progressing my finish spoken skills. instead i saw a demonstration by the team on resiliency and how the human touch is required in the complex IT environment.

IT outages are an inevitable reality. While we strive for uninterrupted service, occasional disruptions are part and parcel of managing complex technological environments. However, the key differentiator lies not in the avoidance of these issues or designing highly resilent systems but in our ability to response to issues and outages. Ensuring we have the right talent to diagnose and fix problems systematically can create substantial change the resilent setup for any organization.

First, it’s crucial to acknowledge that outages happen. This acceptance forms the foundation of a proactive strategy. Instead of a reactive scramble when systems fail, we prepare for these eventualities with robust processes and skilled teams ready to address issues swiftly and effectively.

Having a talented IT team equipped with the right tools and knowledge is indispensable. These professionals can identify the root causes of outages, deploy quick fixes, and implement long-term solutions to prevent recurrence. Their expertise in structured honest troubleshooting ensures that downtime is minimised and business operations can resume promptly.

Moreover, a structured practiced approach to dealing with outages fosters resilience. It’s not just about solving the immediate problem but also about learning from each incident. Post-mortem analyses, for instance, help in understanding what went wrong and how similar issues can be avoided in the future. This continuous improvement cycle strengthens the organisation's overall IT infrastructure, making it more robust against future disruptions.

In addition, this resilience boosts stakeholder confidence. When clients and partners see a company effectively managing and overcoming IT challenges, it builds trust and reliability. It demonstrates that the organization is not just equipped to handle crises but is also committed to maintaining high standards of service despite the challenges.

In conclusion, while IT outages are unavoidable, having a skilled team to address these issues in a structured manner is vital. It ensures minimal disruption, increases transparent communication, continuous improvement, and strengthens organizational resilience, ultimately leading to enhanced trust and reliability in the eyes of stakeholders

Tony O'Donnell

🏋️ I help businesses in the UK & Ireland commercialise & scale 📈 innovative, digital, solutions 💡 that address any Climate, Clean Power or Sustainability challenges 🌍. 🚀Do well by doing good 🌱

8mo

Some good "transfer learning" to anyone facing an unexpected crisis scenario. Thanks for sharing John van Uden

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Nathan O'Reilly

Digital Transformation leader adept at managing complex, high-impact programs with senior stakeholders and large global budgets

9mo

Thanks for sharing John and spot on. Having a. Culture of planning for, and learning from outages really does work. Acknowledging that the team will use corporate and more direct communication channels to work quickly on resolving issues is also key.

Monica Sasso

Global financial services Red Hat | BankingTech Woman in IT of 2024 | IBM Industry Diamond | Global Women's Leadership Community Chairwoman

9mo

Resilience comes in many shapes, sizes a d constructs! Love this. And practise, practise, practise. Then practise some more!

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Peter Hunter

Head of SRE and Security | AI Champion | Thought Leader | Engineering excellence protection of advanced cloud platforms with a focus on resilience, security, scale and FinOps. I love building high-performing teams

9mo

The often overlooked operations teams that keep our dreams alive are not 2nd class to developer teams....

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