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What kCura Relativity Best in Service Means for SQL Server DBAs

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Brace yourselves. Our Black Friday sale is coming.

Best-in-Service

kCura Relativity is a legal e-discovery application that hosts its data in SQL Server. You can host it yourself, or hire a hosting partner who specializes in hosting it for you. The best hosting partners compete for Best in Service status, an award that means what it says on the tin.

Starting this year, kCura’s toughened up the requirements for Best in Service. It ain’t Average in Service, or Good Enough in Service. As a result, database administrators have some extra work to do.

Best in Service requires a disaster recovery plan.

Deep, calming breaths. I didn’t say a warm standby data center – I just said a plan. It might be perfectly okay for your plan to be, “Step 1: panic. Step 2: call Brent to bring our databases back from the dead.”

Here’s the thing, though: at some point, one of your customers is going to ask to see the plan. (I know, because I’ve been involved in some of those conversations.) You don’t want to show them a plan that looks that way.

Use these resources to get started:

Best in Service Requires Transparency

kCura’s all about transparency, right down to the Trust portal that shows Best in Service partner service status. Today, publishing your scores is optional – but come summer, it’s going to be mandatory.

That means if you miss backups or DBCCs, the whole world’s gonna know.

And it’s going to cost your business real money.

I’m wildly excited about this because it brings business focus to a very important DBA job duty. It’s your job to make sure the data is safe and secure. Start measuring it and checking today before you have awkward management conversations this summer.


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