Fraud Blocker

When Was the Last Time You Tested Your Recovery Plan?

A person in a suit holds a magnifying glass over digital graphs and data charts, suggesting analysis or data investigation.

Because an untested plan is a plan that fails when you need it most.

Most businesses think they have a solid Disaster Recovery Plan (DRP) in place. The documents exist. The procedures are written. Backups are scheduled. People assume that if something goes wrong, the plan will kick in, and everything will work the way it should.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth:

If you haven’t tested your recovery plan recently, you don’t actually have a plan, you have a guess.

And guesses fail at the worst possible time.

Untested recovery plans consistently break down during real incidents, leaving organizations scrambling to restore operations under pressure, with missing information, outdated instructions, and responsibilities no one remembers ever agreeing to.

Let’s look at why testing matters, what commonly goes wrong, and how to ensure your plan actually works when you need it.


Why Testing Your Recovery Plan Is Non‑Negotiable

A Disaster Recovery Plan is only as good as its most recent test.
And yet, many organizations put off testing because:

  • “We don’t have time.”
  • “It’ll disrupt everyone’s work.”
  • “We already know it works.”
  • “We tested it a few years ago, it should be fine.”

But real-world incidents don’t wait for a convenient moment.
Cyberattacks, system failures, power outages, and hardware malfunctions hit without warning.

When the pressure is on, you need a plan that is current, clear, and proven. Without testing, most plans fall apart due to invisible weaknesses.


The Most Common Reasons Untested Recovery Plans Fail

1. Outdated Procedures No One Has Reviewed in Years

Technology changes. Systems get upgraded or replaced. People switch tools.
But unless your DRP is updated, and tested, those changes never get documented.

This leads to situations like:

  • Instructions for servers that no longer exist
  • Recovery steps referencing outdated software
  • Login credentials for accounts that were retired
  • Missing steps for cloud-based services that replaced old hardware

During a crisis, outdated information becomes a major roadblock.


2. Missing Dependencies You Didn’t Know You Needed

Many systems rely on hidden or easily forgotten components:

  • Background services
  • Licensing servers
  • API integrations
  • Authentication tools
  • Network configurations
  • Third-party platforms

A recovery plan often focuses on the “main system” but doesn’t consider what else that system needs to function.

Testing exposes these blind spots, before they become downtime.


3. Unclear Responsibilities That Lead to Confusion

When disaster strikes, everyone assumes someone else is handling it.

Typical issues include:

  • No one knows who declares a disaster
  • No clear owner for each recovery step
  • Leadership not knowing who to contact
  • IT waiting for instructions that never come
  • Staff unsure who communicates with customers or partners

A DRP without clear roles creates bottlenecks, delays, and unnecessary chaos.

Testing forces clarity, accountability, and coordination.


4. Backup Systems That “Work” … Until You Try to Restore

One of the biggest myths in IT is:

“The backups completed successfully, so we’re covered.”

False.

Backups that restore poorly, or not at all, are shockingly common.

Without testing, you might not know:

  • The backup is corrupted
  • The retention schedule wasn’t set correctly
  • The backups don’t include all critical data
  • Recovery takes hours longer than expected
  • The restored system doesn’t function as intended

A backup without a tested restore process is just an illusion of safety.


5. Communication Breakdowns No One Notices Until It’s Too Late

During an outage or disaster, communication matters just as much as recovery.

Testing helps reveal issues like:

  • Out-of-date contact lists
  • Notification systems no one checks
  • Staff unaware of communication protocols
  • Customers left wondering what’s happening
  • Leadership unable to get accurate updates

A tested plan ensures everyone knows what’s happening, when, and why.


How Often Should You Test Your Recovery Plan?

Ideally:

  • Full DRP test: once per year
  • Partial tests or tabletop exercises: every 6 months
  • Critical systems / backups: monthly or quarterly
  • After any major system or staff change: immediately

Frequent testing keeps your plan aligned with your actual business environment.


Testing Isn’t a Burden, It’s an Investment in Survivability

When you test your DRP, you gain:

✔ Confidence your systems can actually be restored
✔ Clarity around roles and responsibilities
✔ Updated documentation that matches your real environment
✔ Faster recovery times
✔ Reduced downtime costs
✔ Stronger resilience against cyberattacks and outages

Testing isn’t about checking a compliance box, it’s about ensuring your business can keep operating when it matters most.


So… When Was the Last Time You Tested Your Recovery Plan?

If the answer is:

  • “I don’t know,”
  • “Not recently,”
  • “Sometime before COVID,” or
  • “Never…”

…then it’s time to schedule your next test.

Your recovery plan should be a living document; proven, practiced, and ready to protect your business when the unexpected happens.

Share

Ready for an IT Consultation?

Our experts are ready to help you improve your IT systems and infrastructure for optimal security and efficiency. 

Call Now