Do you have a business continuity plan in place? Every hour counts in trucking. Being prepared for disaster recovery can be the difference between keeping customers and losing to the competition.
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 ...
Many small businesses are able to continue to operate during a crisis, such as a weather-related emergency, because they have continuity plans. In addition to creating a continuity plan, your company ...
A business continuity plan outlines procedures and instructions an organization must follow in the face of disaster, whether fire, flood or cyberattack. Here's how to create one that gives your ...
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 ...
Few companies were braced for the terrorist actions of September 11, 2001. Networks housing vital customer and financial data were severed without any secondary systems to take up the slack.
There’s no shortage of unsettling reminders to business owners that disasters can and do happen. For a small business in particular, picking up the pieces and starting to serve customers again can be ...
Disasters happen more frequently than we’d like to think they do, and no business is immune to unexpected floods, electrical fires, or critical hardware failure. Nor should any business underestimate ...
Many organizations in the current COVID-19 crisis have pivoted so quickly to a remote working model that it has put the spotlight on business continuity like never before. Pre-crisis, most businesses ...
A scandal that goes to the top of management. A consumer device with dangerous defects. A poorly-worded tweet. All three of these are examples of easily preventable business crises. Each one reflects ...
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