In the past, most enterprises defined a disaster as an act of nature–a hurricane, tornado, flood or fire that wipes out their ability to conduct business as usual. Today, with worldwide networks, 24/7 ...
Learn how business continuity planning can help businesses survive climate disruption in 2026 by protecting operations, ...
In my last post, I began a series leading to the development of a Business Continuity Event Management (BCEM) plan, with an overview of BCEM management. In this installment, we’ll continue our ...
Matt is chair of the firm’s OSHA and workplace disasters practice group and former chair of the labor and employment practice group. He has successfully handled hundreds of agency proceedings, ...
Most companies that I speak with already have business continuity plans in place. That’s certainly true in the financial services industry, where even short and mild network disruptions can cost ...
First hurricane Helene smashed the Southeast, destroying homes and businesses. Not long after, hurricane Milton retraced some of her catastrophic path, adding to both the human toll and billions of ...
In previous posts, we examined understanding the business, the relationship between event response and recovery efforts, and how to build an incident response plan. The natural next step after initial ...
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.
When leaders talk about resilience, two disciplines dominate: business continuity and disaster recovery (BCDR) and identity threat detection and response (ITDR). Each has long been treated as a ...