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Business Continuity: An introduction

Business Continuity: An introduction. Purpose The sole purpose of Business Continuity is to Maintain a minimum level of service while Restoring the organization to business as usual. Who needs it?

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Business Continuity: An introduction

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  1. Business Continuity: An introduction

  2. Purpose • The sole purpose of Business Continuity is to Maintain a minimum level of service while Restoring the organization to business as usual

  3. Who needs it? Everyone • Commerce and industry need it to protect the customer base • Charities need it to assure continued funding • Government agencies need it to assure continued funding and existence • Managers need it to assure their positions

  4. The difference • The difference between Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery • Business Continuity is PROACTIVE; its focus is to avoid or mitigate the impact of a risk • Disaster Recovery is REACTIVE; its focus is to pick up the pieces and to restore the organization to business as usual after a risk occurs • Disaster Recovery is an integral part of a Business Continuity plan

  5. Why Business Continuity? • An organization which fails to provide a minimum level of service to its clients following a disaster event may not have a business to recover • Customers may go to a competitor • Funding may disappear • A need may be re-evaluated and deemed unnecessary

  6. What to protect • Business functions • Functions which provide products or services • Critical support functions • Functions without which the Business Functions cannot function (e.g. Facilities, IT) • Corporate level support functions • Functions required for effective operation of Business Functions (e.g. HR, Finance)

  7. Most important resource Personnel

  8. Why people? • Although there are other critical resources, the actual product or service in most organizations depends on actions performed by, and decisions made by, people.

  9. Who is involved? In a word, EVERYONE • Executive management • Mid-level managers • Line personnel • Support personnel • Vendors • Municipal Emergency Management

  10. Management involvement Executive management • Support is required for successful plan • Provides high-level overview of organization’s operation • Provides long-range planning to assure the Business Continuity plan compliments the organization’s Business Plan

  11. Mid-level managers • Provide departmental direction • Provide department-level overviews • Provide an insight into external (to the department/function) interdependencies • Offer suggestions on how to enhance critical business processes • Identify risks

  12. Line personnel • Provide operational details • Offer suggestions on how to enhance critical business processes • Identify risks

  13. Support personnel • Provide information about services which assure the critical Business Functions can be performed at a minimum level of service or better • Provide information about protecting resources

  14. Support may include • Accounts receivable • Accounts payable • Communications • Documentation • Facilities • Finance • Human Resources • IT/MIS • Janitorial • Legal • Mail Room • Marketing • Public relations • Sales

  15. Vendors Vendors provide services and products • Courier services and mail • Communications (telephone, fax, email) • Insurance (business, health, property) • Necessities (municipal services) • Utilities (electricity, fuel)

  16. Emergency Management Municipal Emergency management must be included in the plan to • Assure personnel safety • Mitigate damage from risks • Train personnel to avoid risks and to protect themselves and the organization

  17. No man – or department – is an island

  18. Protect all to protect one • In order to protect any single Business Function, the enterprise must be protected. • There are too many easily identifiable dependencies to create successful “function-only” or “resource-only” plans.

  19. A few risks • Espionage • Fire • Flood • Hacked database • HazMat incident • Heat • Hurricane • Ice • Industry image (airlines) • Aircraft accident • Bond rating • Civil unrest • Communications • Competition • Customer failure (K-Mart) • Debris • Drought • Electrical failure • Epidemic

  20. A few more risks • Snow • State law • Stock value • Tornado • Traffic accident • Vendor failure • Wildfire • Work action • Ubiquitous “other” • Internet failure • Intranet failure • IT/MIS • Legal action • Lender reluctance • Local statues • Loss of key personnel • Rail accident • Recession • Regulatory agencies • Reputation

  21. Rating a risk • Not all risks present the same danger to an organization • Risks are rated based on • Probability of occurrence • Impact on the organization

  22. Risk options • Avoid the risk • Usually the most expensive option • Required by some 24*7*365 operations • Mitigate the risk • Less expensive than avoidance • Reduces the impact of the “inevitable” • Absorb the risk • The process or product is antiquated anyway

  23. The plan – Part 2 • Create business continuation processes • Create organization recovery processes • Create a training program • Establish a plan maintenance procedure • Train, train, and train some more

  24. Business continuation • Business continuation processes are designed so the organization maintains “at least a minimum level of service” to assure there will be a business to recover • Each Business and Support function must have a continuation plan • How quickly the process must be functioning depends on the maximum allowable outage

  25. Recover the business • This may be in multiple stages: • Recovery to a minimum level of service • Recovery to business as usual There may be intermediate stages between the two recovery stages shown above

  26. Training program • The training program has two primary goals: • To assure personnel will be able to efficiently and effectively respond following a disaster event • To develop self-confidence in the personnel to perform their assigned functions

  27. Maintenance • A plan that lacks maintenance quickly becomes a “non-plan” • Plan maintenance is based on the calendar • Plan maintenance is based on “trigger” events • Personnel change • Process, procedure change • Etc.

  28. Creating a plan • Do it yourself • Can you think of everything? • Can you think objectively? • Who will review your plan? • Call a professional • Experience • Network to help think of almost everything • Only objective is to create a successful plan

  29. 1) Develop a business continuity / disaster recovery plan - Establish a disaster-recovery team of employees who know your business best, and assign responsibilities for specific tasks. - Identify your risks (kinds of disasters you're most likely to experience). - Prioritize critical business functions and how quickly these must be recovered.- Establish a disaster recovery location where employees may work off-site and access critical back-up systems, records and supplies.- Obtain temporary housing for key employees, their families and pets.- Update and test your plan at least annually.

  30. 2) Alternative operational locationsDetermine which alternatives are available. For example: - A satellite or branch office of your business.- The office of a business partner or even an employee.- Home or hotel.

  31. 3) Backup site. Equip your backup operations site with critical equipment, data files and supplies: - Power generators. - Computers and software. - Critical computer data files (payroll, accounts payable and receivable, customer orders, inventory). - Phones/radios/TVs. - Equipment and spare parts. - Vehicles, boats and spare parts. - Digital cameras. - Common supplies. - Supplies unique to your business (order forms, contracts, etc.). - Basic first aid/sanitary supplies, potable water and food.

  32. 4) Safeguard your property Is your property prepared to survive a hurricane or other disaster: - Your building? - Your equipment? - Your computer systems? - Your company vehicles? - Your company records? - Other company assets?

  33. 5) Contact information Do you have current and multiple contact information (e.g., home and cell phone numbers, personal e-mail addresses) for: - Employees? - Key customers? - Important vendors, suppliers, business partners? - Insurance companies? - Is contact information accessible electronically for fast access by all employees?

  34. 6) Communications Do you have access to multiple and reliable methods of communicating with your employees: - Emergency toll-free hotline? - Website? - Cell phones? - Satellite phones? - Pagers? - BlackBerry(TM)? - Two-way radios? - Internet? - E-mail?

  35. 7) Employee preparation Make sure your employees know: - Company emergency plan. - Where they should relocate to work. - How to use and have access to reliable methods of communication, such as satellite/cell phones, e-mail, voice mail, Internet, text messages, BlackBerry(TM), PDAs. - How they will be notified to return to work. - Benefits of direct deposit of payroll and subscribe to direct deposit. - Emergency company housing options available for them and their family.

  36. 8) Customer preparation Make sure your key customers know: - Your emergency contact information for sales and service support (publish on your website). - Your backup business or store locations (publish on your website). - What to expect from your company in the event of a prolonged disaster displacement. - Alternate methods for placing orders. - Alternate methods for sending invoice payments in the event of mail disruption.

  37. 9) Evacuation order When a mandatory evacuation is issued, be prepared to grab and leave with critical office records and equipment: - Company business continuity / disaster recovery plan and checklist. - Insurance policies and company contracts. - Company checks, plus a list of all bank accounts, credit cards, ATM cards. - Employee payroll and contact information. - Desktop/laptop computers. - Customer records, including orders in progress. - Photographs/digital images of your business property. - Post disaster contact information inside your business to alert emergency workers how to reach you. - Secure your building and property.

  38. 10) Cash management Be prepared to meet emergency cash-flow needs: - Take your checkbook and credit cards in the event of an evacuation. - Keep enough cash on hand to handle immediate needs. - Use Internet banking services to monitor account activity, manage cash flow, initiate wires, pay bills. - Issue corporate cards to essential personnel to cover emergency business expenses. - Reduce dependency on paper checks and postal service to send and receive payments (consider using electronic payment and remote deposit banking services).

  39. 11) Post-disaster recovery procedures - Consider how your post-disaster business may differ from today. - Plan whom you will want to contact and when. - Assign specific tasks to responsible employees. - Track progress and effectiveness. - Document lessons learned and best practices.

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