We are independent & ad-supported. We may earn a commission for purchases made through our links.

Advertiser Disclosure

Our website is an independent, advertising-supported platform. We provide our content free of charge to our readers, and to keep it that way, we rely on revenue generated through advertisements and affiliate partnerships. This means that when you click on certain links on our site and make a purchase, we may earn a commission. Learn more.

How We Make Money

We sustain our operations through affiliate commissions and advertising. If you click on an affiliate link and make a purchase, we may receive a commission from the merchant at no additional cost to you. We also display advertisements on our website, which help generate revenue to support our work and keep our content free for readers. Our editorial team operates independently from our advertising and affiliate partnerships to ensure that our content remains unbiased and focused on providing you with the best information and recommendations based on thorough research and honest evaluations. To remain transparent, we’ve provided a list of our current affiliate partners here.

What is the Recovery Point Objective?

By Toni Henthorn
Updated May 17, 2024
Our promise to you
WiseGeek is dedicated to creating trustworthy, high-quality content that always prioritizes transparency, integrity, and inclusivity above all else. Our ensure that our content creation and review process includes rigorous fact-checking, evidence-based, and continual updates to ensure accuracy and reliability.

Our Promise to you

Founded in 2002, our company has been a trusted resource for readers seeking informative and engaging content. Our dedication to quality remains unwavering—and will never change. We follow a strict editorial policy, ensuring that our content is authored by highly qualified professionals and edited by subject matter experts. This guarantees that everything we publish is objective, accurate, and trustworthy.

Over the years, we've refined our approach to cover a wide range of topics, providing readers with reliable and practical advice to enhance their knowledge and skills. That's why millions of readers turn to us each year. Join us in celebrating the joy of learning, guided by standards you can trust.

Editorial Standards

At WiseGeek, we are committed to creating content that you can trust. Our editorial process is designed to ensure that every piece of content we publish is accurate, reliable, and informative.

Our team of experienced writers and editors follows a strict set of guidelines to ensure the highest quality content. We conduct thorough research, fact-check all information, and rely on credible sources to back up our claims. Our content is reviewed by subject matter experts to ensure accuracy and clarity.

We believe in transparency and maintain editorial independence from our advertisers. Our team does not receive direct compensation from advertisers, allowing us to create unbiased content that prioritizes your interests.

In today's computer-driven economy, businesses must respond to the danger of data loss and costly downtime associated with hardware and software malfunctions, equipment failure, acts of terrorism, and natural disasters. As part of every business impact analysis, company management must establish specific goals for disaster recovery, including the recovery point objective (RPO). The recovery point objective is the retroactive period to which data can be restored after a disaster and still allow the company to resume normal operations. In other words, the RPO refers to the acceptable amount of potential data loss, in terms of time, that the company can tolerate. The recovery point objective determines the frequency of key business data backup and the technology involved in that process.

Although it might seem prudent to keep all data backed up to the minute, the cost of doing so may be prohibitive, particularly if a company wishes to store information off site. Each company must carefully weigh its actual needs for recovery of critical information against the costs of a proposed recovery system. For example, banks and stock exchanges cannot tolerate any loss of data, requiring an up-to-the-minute or continuous "Point of Failure RPO." A medical office does have critical patient and financial data on its computer system, but it can resume operations if the information is restored from the backup the night before, called a "Close of Business RPO." Finally, a teenager who plays games and surfs the net on his home computer may have a "Zero RPO," meaning that he does not have a serious backup need.

In addition to the recovery point objective, a business continuity plan also contains a recovery time objective (RTO), a targeted time from the time of the failure to restoration of data. For example, a company may decide that it must resume normal activity within six hours of a disaster in order to minimize financial losses. The data retrieval systems used by the company must provide a full restoration of critical data within a six-hour window. While the RPO determines backup frequency, the RTO determines the recovery technology. Diverse modalities for backup and recovery from tapes, discs, external hard drives, online storage, and alternate physical sites connected by telecommunications systems all provide differing degrees of accessibility, security, and rate of recovery.

Several key factors enter into the determination of a recovery point objective. First, company management must segregate the information that is utterly essential to basic operations to reduce the costs of data replication and storage. If a company wants to reproduce and store all data, including noncritical data, it may have to reduce the frequency of replication in order to contain costs. For continuous recovery systems, the reliability of data replicated during the course of a long-term disaster cannot be guaranteed. If the company desires regional protection, with off site storage, the costs of maintaining dark fiber, dense wave division multiplexor (DWDM) technology, or telecommunication lines will necessitate longer RPOs.

WiseGeek is dedicated to providing accurate and trustworthy information. We carefully select reputable sources and employ a rigorous fact-checking process to maintain the highest standards. To learn more about our commitment to accuracy, read our editorial process.

Discussion Comments

WiseGeek, in your inbox

Our latest articles, guides, and more, delivered daily.

WiseGeek, in your inbox

Our latest articles, guides, and more, delivered daily.