Posts Tagged ‘Business’

A Quick Guide to Business Continuity Planning

December 31st, 2011

What is Business Continuity Planning?

In simple terms Business Continuity is the process of planning and validating how to survive a disaster or incident that disrupts normal business. It describes how to prepare for, prevent, respond to, recover and restore critical functions and defines how a company will stay in business regardless of the source or scale of disruption – computer virus or crash, employee death or resignation, strike action, fire, flood, severe weather, terrorism, vandalism, robbery, pandemic illness, new legislation, random acts of God…

Why every company needs a Business Continuity Plan

There is evidence that companies without a business continuity plan are far more likely to collapse following an incident than those with a plan in place. This ability to demonstrate forward-thinking can also be very good for your company’s reputation, helping you secure funding or new business. Increasingly business continuity planning is a factor when customers are procuring or commissioning work from new suppliers. Insurance providers are also beginning to ask businesses about plans before agreeing to insure.

Investing in an effective approach to Business Continuity can be very attractive to senior or executive management as it brings numerous benefits to the business:

  • Reduced exposure of the business
  • Risk management process in place
  • More operational resilience as a result of identifying and reducing risks
  • Reduce downtime due to the identification of alternative processes and workarounds
  • Compliance issues can be identified and better managed
  • Compliance with Health & Safety legislation
  • Reduced exposure to liability actions
  • Improved security
  • Better protection of assets
  • Improved operational effectiveness as a result of process re-engineering
  • Ownership of key processes identified
  • Defined and documented recovery processes
  • Better record keeping
  • Share value protected
  • Supply chain resilience
  • Reduce insurance premiums
  • Competitive edge

The Business Continuity Planning Process

For Business Continuity Planning to be a success the Senior Management Team must buy-in to the process, this means supporting it with funding, resources, effective communication and if needed, training. A small team with wide experience from across the company should be appointed to take responsibility and the team’s coordinator should ideally have project management skills.

Phase 1 – Analysis & Development

The first step is to carry out a Business Impact Analysis and identify the most important aspects of the company’s operations and the likely weak points. It’s well worth doing some research on previous incidents that have happened in similar industries as well as the local area.

Resilience audits should be carried out to check systems and processes for dealing with disruption. These audits will highlight areas for improvement and the action needed.

All key personnel should be identified at this stage and succession plans created for them, key personnel are not necessarily senior managers it can be anyone with unique skills or knowledge.

Business Recovery

November 12th, 2011

If you stay in business long enough you will witness the good side and the bad side of business life. It is an unfortunate fact of life that things never run smoothly all of the time, in fact they have a way of turning bad when least expected.

One of the most difficult decisions a business owner can face, is deciding if their businesses worth recovering? To find the true answer to this question it is sometimes worth employing the opinion of an outside agency. This agency will carry out a complete audit and report their finding to you, the good thing about employing an outside agency is they are devoid of emotion towards the business and deal purely with facts and figures.

If the company is deemed recoverable a recovery package can be put in place, generally this comes in the form of a long term loan. Most recovery loans come with stipulations; the reason is to prevent the business failing in the future. Businesses the world over will come across difficult times, for various reasons, the one factor that separates successful businessmen from their peers is lessons are learned by their mistakes and errors of judgement.

Administrators are usually called in for large or PLC’s (Public Limited Company) that find themselves in financial trouble. This normally happens after financial support for the company is withdrawn. News that the Administrators have been called in usually result in the mass ‘sell off’ of company shares; this compounds the problems even more. The Administrators will carry out a complete audit and ascertain if there is anything left of value after all debts are paid. Generally speaking debts are not payable and the company is listed as bankrupt. However on the odd occasion the Administrators will see value in keeping the company afloat, a recovery package is put in place and things have been known to eventually turn around totally.

Disaster Planning For Small Business

November 6th, 2011

No one knows just how many small businesses owners lost everything in Hurricane Katrina. No one knows how many will be able to come back from disaster. But the odds are that the ones who successfully rebuild there businesses will be the ones who had a disaster plan in place before the hurricane struck. A solid small business disaster plan has three components, protecting human resources, protecting physical resources and planning for business continuity.

If you’re a sole proprietor, your plans to protect your human resources probably dovetail easily with your plans to protect your home and family. However, if you have employees, you need a more detailed plan to estimate how long employees will be unable to get to work, what your policy will be for compensation while employees are out of work after a disaster, and how you will make payroll if computer systems and banks are inaccessible.

You will also need an immediate disaster response plan to cover what you and your employees will do in an emergency and during its aftermath to protect life and limb. This plan should include things like administering first aid, food and water storage, establishing a company-wide meeting place and proper safety precautions that you and your employees should take during and after a disaster.

Protecting your physical resources is more complicated depending on whether you own or lease the building that houses your business. If your building is leased you will need to work with your landlord to develop a solid property protection plan for the building. You and your employees will need to develop a separate plan to protect assets in the leased space such as furniture and computers. If you own your building, consulting with an architect or engineer about your building’s capabilities in a disaster can help you plan what measures need to be taken to protect it. Your local chamber of commerce or Small Business Administration can provide you with a property protection checklist to incorporate into your disaster plan.

Having employees present in an undamaged building after a disaster won’t do any good if you don’t have the critical records you need to run your business. A business continuity plan will ensure that you have procedures in place to protect your vital paper and electronic records. A business continuity plan also needs to address issues like interruption of deliveries from upstream suppliers and estimates of your company’s ability to deliver to your customers after a disaster.