A BCP would likely be tailored to the size and needs of your company or sector. In the services sector, many companies have implemented remote working as the new norm, but in sectors such as manufacturing, this is not feasible for certain jobs. For these companies, continuity planning may involve reducing the personnel allowed on-site, while allowing workers in roles that can function remotely (finance or marketing, for example) to remain at home.
Conduct a Business Impact Analysis to Find Vulnerabilities
Before putting together a BCP, you’ll want to complete a business impact analysis, or BIA, which is intended to determine the impact of an interruption on your various business operations. The analysis reveals an organization’s vulnerabilities so that managers can understand how to maintain its operations through a period of upheaval and prepare for any potential setbacks.
Essential to a BIA is the idea that all of a company’s operations rely on each other. A BIA analysis would look at the financial and logistical costs of unexpected events and apportion each one a probability so that a manager can assess the relative risk of each scenario and use risk management strategies to manage each one.
Time is a critical factor in developing a BIA, Monteith says. Organizations need to look at their various operations and answer some key questions, such as:
- How long can we go without a particular function or process?
- How long can the business function without doing a particular activity?
- What are the minimum operational resources required to sustain a function?
Understanding and answering these questions helps you identify and prioritize each function according to how critical it is to sustained operations. Ask yourself: If we don’t do a certain task, what kind of impact will it have? What are the costs to the organization over time? How significant is it to the organization over time? Do we need to do it right now, or can we wait? Activities you can’t do without should be deemed mission critical, and they need to be supported and adequately resourced to ensure continuity of operations, Monteith says.
Examples of these kinds of functions are communications, or IT—critical functions that must be maintained for an organization to operate. We need to be able to communicate or use computers to do our work, so very often those mission-critical functions are ones that require the most immediate and constant support throughout an event.
“The BIA should thoroughly evaluate processes or functions performed in each department, interdependencies within departments, across departments, and with external vendors,” Monteith says. “What are the implications of a disruption to our staff, leadership, communications, technology facilities, and supply chain?”
The BIA and BCP work together to allow organizations to understand the most important elements of their operations, and how to maintain them in a crisis. Disruptive events, from pandemics to economic downturns, can happen at any time. Anticipating and preparing for them is a smart way to ensure your organization endures.
Taking action today to understand your organization’s vulnerabilities will not only support your business continuity planning, it will also help you become more resilient in the future.
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31Hi George, we anticipate our inventory levels returning approximately mid to end May.
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