Client Case Study · Insurance
How a Mid-Market Insurance Carrier Cut Disaster-Recovery Spend 51% Without Reducing Coverage
[CLIENT DESCRIPTOR] restructured maintenance coverage across its production and disaster-recovery sites with WUC — cutting DR-site support spend [51%] while improving recovery-time objective by [37%] under audit scrutiny.
Client Profile
The Challenge
Paying full OEM premium on a DR site that sat idle 95% of the time — while auditors demanded shorter RTO
The client’s IT organization maintained mirrored production and disaster-recovery sites to satisfy [NAIC and state-insurance-department audit requirements]. Both sites ran identical OEM maintenance contracts — the DR site idle except for quarterly failover tests, yet billed at the same premium coverage tier as the production-active site.
A [recent regulatory audit] flagged the current [8-hour recovery-time objective] as insufficient for policy-servicing systems. Reducing RTO under the existing OEM model would have required [$400K+] in additional premium coverage — at the same time the CFO was demanding flat or reduced IT operating spend in the coming fiscal year.
The WUC Solution
Asymmetric coverage tiering that matches DR economics — with faster recovery, not slower
Production and DR coverage decoupling
WUC engineers rebuilt coverage from first principles: [2-hour onsite SLA on production, 4-hour onsite on DR with guaranteed parts availability]. Prior model had paid for near-identical SLA on both sites despite vastly different utilization — producing [$470K] of immediate annual savings.
Pre-positioned DR parts inventory on the client’s premises
Instead of paying OEM for promised parts delivery, WUC pre-positioned a [critical-components kit] inside the DR data center itself — sized to cover [top-90% failure modes] on the covered fleet. Converted a ship-time variable into a zero-time constant, which is what drove the RTO improvement.
Quarterly DR-failover-drill integration
WUC engineers now participate in [every quarterly failover drill] under the service agreement, validating parts inventory and SLA assumptions against real recovery scenarios. Auditors receive drill reports signed by WUC as third-party attestation — a capability OEM contracts did not include.
Compliance-aware change management
All maintenance activities, parts replacements, and engineer access are logged against [NAIC audit controls and the client’s SOX framework]. The audit trail is accessible to the client’s internal audit team in real time — replacing the prior process of requesting records from three separate OEM portals.
The Results
Year-one outcomes
The insight that broke open the budget wasn’t a price cut — it was realizing we were paying production premiums on equipment that ran at five percent utilization. WUC structured the coverage the way we actually run the business, not the way the OEM price sheet was organized.
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Book a Discovery Call →Client identity protected under NDA. Figures derived from [engagement documentation on file]. Results are representative of similar engagements; actual outcomes vary by infrastructure mix, contract terms, and service tier.