Your business continuity plan (or BCP) is an individualized, documented series of actions to be taken when a catastrophe strikes — be it an emergency evacuation, a cyber breach, or something else.
A BCP ensures that protocols, procedures, contact lists, and other resources are at your fingertips at a moment’s notice. It is designed to:
It’s simple: planning = resilience.
Companies that have a BCP in place have a much better chance of mitigating and surviving the effects of disastrous events on humans, facilities, and finances. It can help minimize dangers to employees, enable operations to continue, protect a company’s revenue, reputation and competitive advantage, and control recovery costs.
The following elements can help ensure you get your BCP off to a good start:
Your business operations are unique. It’s essential to identify and rank both general risks and potentially ruinous hazards that are most likely to threaten your company’s resiliency.
Each potential threat has its considerations. For example, if a facility handles flammable materials or is in a geographic area with an increased risk of tornadoes, then plant construction is critical. If your business handles sensitive customer data, then cyber breaches are of utmost concern — and so forth.
After a thorough assessment, it’s time to make contingency plans to minimize the impact of your key risks. Depending on your needs, this can mean safeguarding a hardcopy data backup offsite, keeping a list of alternate vendors for critical parts, or having a process in place to move your entire operation.
What will you do when there’s an earthquake or a bomb threat? Before life- or health-threatening situations occur, have these key emergency protocols in place:
Detail your company’s critical business functions and identify what will be required to restore such areas as sales, production, and operations to pre-disaster levels.
Make sure these steps are supported by a financial plan, including recovery budget requirements and a list of available assets (such as emergency funds, secured credit lines, and insurance policies).
Neither your business nor its potential threats are static — so neither should be your BCP. Be sure to review and update your plan regularly.
Given the importance of comprehensive BCP to a company’s post-disaster survival and recovery, the best time to develop one is when you start your business. The next best time is today.
Creating a BCP is a multi-faceted process that requires institutional attention and resources. For help with your business continuity analysis and planning, we offer a comprehensive Business Continuity Planning Guide.We provide risk management tools and resources geared to specific, most relevant business hazards that may be applicable to you, such as floods due to changing weather patterns; internet of things technology failures; or supply chain interruptions caused by more frequent and severe natural hazards, pandemics, and civil unrest. Proper planning and documentation of best practices can help ensure that your business will be resilient in the event of a disaster.
For more information, contact Chubb Risk Engineering Services.
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