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Charity foundation outsources to protect data

Charity foundation outsources to protect data

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 01 Mar 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Secure systems and reliable servers are critical for donor organizations supplying funding during crises like the recent earthquakes in Chile and Haiti. The Vancouver Foundation decided outsourcing its entire IT infrastructure was the best route to take in order to protect data and ensure security in B.C.

 

Secure systems and reliable servers are critical for donor organizations that supply funding during crises like the recent earthquakes in Chile and Haiti.

The Vancouver Foundation, responsible for $700 million worth of endowments for 1,300 not-for-profit funds, recently decided outsourcing its entire IT infrastructure was the best route to take in order to protect data and ensure security in the event of a crisis occurring in B.C.

“If something would happen in Vancouver like an earthquake, we have a fund that would provide relief, but of course, we have to be able to access those funds in the time of the disaster, so it’s rather important … that our servers don’t go down,” said Karina Thomas, director of IT at the Vancouver Foundation.

From an IT perspective, the recent events in Haiti and Chile show how important it is for donor organizations to maintain and keep their services up and online because so many donations are made through online sources, she noted. It’s equally important for the donor organizations to be able to contact their donors through their systems, she said. 

The Vancouver Foundation recently selected Canadian managed IT solutions provider Fusepoint Managed Services Inc. to provide all of its application and infrastructure support.

Outsourcing made sense from both a staffing and disaster recovery perspective, according to Thomas. “Because we are managing up to $700 million of donors that are rather significant in our community, we don’t want to be in a position where we have potential breaches of security,” she said.

But with a total of 52 staff and four staff in IT, it “wasn’t feasible to have the depth of knowledge that we wanted in-house,” she said. “We have such a small volume of servers and such a small IT staffing footprint, it didn’t make sense.” 

And even if the Foundation did bring in that highly trained skill set, “it would probably be a one- or two-day a week type position and wouldn’t actually give them enough from a professional development viewpoint to retain that skill set we needed,” she said.

The decision to outsource was also based the Foundation’s need to be available in the event of a natural disaster, said Thomas. “We could have looked at co-location, but again, because of our needs around resourcing, it made sense to go with a managed service solution,” she said.

One of the reasons the Foundation selected Fusepoint in particular, according to Thomas, was the company’s background in managed services. “They started in the managed services arena, as opposed to some of the other people who started with co-location, and that seemed to be their strength,” she said.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.

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