A tornado, terrorist attack, explosion or other crisis could temporarily or permanently shut down your small business. A business continuity plan helps your company survive and recover from disasters.
The organizations best prepared to face disruption are those that align security, continuity and risk management around what ...
In an article aimed at providing assistance to those starting out in business continuity, CMAC overviews the basics of business continuity and offers a useful framework for writing your first business ...
A business continuity plan outlines procedures and instructions an organization must follow in the face of disaster, whether ...
The COVID-19 pandemic was most likely not your first business continuity interruption. And unfortunately it won’t be the last one. So now is a good time to review why you need an up-to-date business ...
Business continuity planning is a university-wide initiative to ensure that Case Western Reserve University will be prepared to resume operations with efficiency in the event of a crisis. Business ...
The technology so many of us use for work and daily tasks is often so reliable that it comes as almost a shock when a service or tool isn’t working. But whether due to cyberattacks, natural disasters ...
Using this information, we can plan for inevitable process failures. The BIA uses business impact information and the probability of specific business continuity events to calculate levels of business ...
Gerry Gebel, Strata Identity Head of Standards, former Burton Group analyst and tech executive at Chase Manhattan Bank (now JPMorgan Chase). Running applications and processes in the cloud has ...
Business Continuity is the term used for the process of keeping critical functions operational during an emergency and/or restoring them quickly after an emergency to minimize disruption to teaching, ...
Business continuity can be defined as ‘the processes, procedures, decisions and activities to ensure that an organization can continue to function through an operational interruption’. In other words ...