Downtime is a computer industry term that refers to the time during which a computer or IT system is unavailable, offline, or not operational. Downtime is caused by many things including scheduled shutdowns for maintenance (known as scheduled downtime), human error, software or hardware malfunctions, and environmental disasters (such as power outages, fires, flooding, or major temperature changes).
The cost of downtime implies not only direct financial loss but can have an impact on your company in several other ways:
- Reputational Damage
- Decline in Productivity
- Lost Opportunities
- Data Loss
In the environment of IT, downtime can be one of the metrics used to measure system availability. Availability is often measured against a 100% operational (or never-fails) standard. A common standard of availability is 99.999%, sometimes known as “five 9s” availability.
Service level agreements (SLAs) often use monthly downtime or availability percentages for billing calculation. Scheduled downtime for system updates and routine maintenance is usually not included in the availability percentages for SLA contracts.
For provisioning, service level agreements may use uptime and downtime percentages to describe how dependable various services are available to clients. Such percentages can help to determine the value of each service, as most clients desire continuous real-time availability (or zero downtime).
Before you start looking for ways to prevent downtime, first understand why it happens. There are 4 main reasons why businesses experience IT downtime.