Course Name – Telecomm Network Security
FILLER TEXT
Develop a disaster recovery plan (see chapter 12) for an organization. There are many different templates available online for you to use as reference and guidance. Your plan should cover the following sections (these sections detail the elements in a DR plan in the sequence defined by industry compliance standards ISO 27031 and ISO 24762):
Important: This section should summarize key action steps (such as where to assemble employees if forced to evacuate the building) and list key contacts with contact information for ease of authorizing and launching the plan.
Introduction
Roles and Responsibilities
- Incident Response
- Plan Activation
- Document History
- Procedures
- Appendices: Located at the end of the plan, these can include systems inventories, application inventories, network asset inventories, contracts and service-level agreements, supplier contact data, and any additional documentation that will facilitate recovery.
- Be sure to use hypothetical and fictitious names/contacts/numbers/organizations in your disaster recovery plan. You want to ensure each section is detailed and thorough. Be sure to use the Name of each section above as your section heading in your paper.
- Your paper should be 10-15 pages in length and conform to APA v6 standards. Include at least six scholarly resources (including your textbook). Use the UC library to find peer-reviewed scholarly sources in your paper. Be sure to use proper formatting. You can use titles/charts/tables as you see fit. Stay away from using bulleted/numbered lists.
- PAPER FORMATTING REQUIREMENTS
Your paper must be submitted as a Microsoft Word document with double spacing, 12-point Times New Roman font, and one-inch margins. You should have at least 10 pages, not including Title and Reference pages. Please include appropriate diagrams and images for your disaster recovery plan. All academic sources must be cited using the latest APA guidelines. Section and Sub-section headings should be used throughout the paper. Please review APA guidelines here: https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/01/ for reference.
For in-text citations, the citation needs to go inside the end of the sentence. For example: This is my sentence on APA formatting (APA, 2016).
For references, this list should start on a new page at the end of your document with a hanging indent (the title of the page should be References). You do not need to include the retrieved date. Here are some examples:
Smyth, A. M., Parker, A. L., & Pease, D. L. (2002). A study of enjoyment of peas. Journal of Abnormal Eating, 8(3), 120-125. Retrieved from http://www.articlehomepage.com/full/url/
Bernstein, M. (2002). 10 tips on writing the living Web. A List Apart: For People Who Make Websites, 149. Retrieved from http://www.alistapart.com/articles/writeliving
De Huff, E. W. (n.d.). Taytay’s tales: Traditional Pueblo Indian tales. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved from http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/dehuff/tayt…
Start your paragraph with an indent (tab).
- Use section and sub-section headings
Looking for a solution written from scratch with No plagiarism and No AI?
WHY CHOOSE US?
We deliver quality original papers
|
Our experts write quality original papers using academic databases.We dont use AI in our work. We refund your money if AI is detected |
Free revisions
|
We offer our clients multiple free revisions just to ensure you get what you want. |
Discounted prices
|
All our prices are discounted which makes it affordable to you. Use code FIRST15 to get your discount |
100% originality
|
We deliver papers that are written from scratch to deliver 100% originality. Our papers are free from plagiarism and NO similarity.We have ZERO TOLERANCE TO USE OF AI |
On-time delivery
|
We will deliver your paper on time even on short notice or short deadline, overnight essay or even an urgent essay |