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Effective 03/17/08, UWEM no longer provides support to the CERT and Business Continuity Management programs. All materials provided on this website are provided as reference only.

Mitigation and Business Continuity

Mitigation in business continuity is the attempt to reduce the likelihood of a potential disruption of a critical resource or having had the resource disrupted, reducing the negative impact of the disruption on your operations.

Critical resources are found in four general categories:

  •  People- The folks who run the business
  •  Facilities- Where the business is done
  •  Information- Data the business needs
  •  Assets- Equipment and supplies the business needs

If any of these four resources are disrupted, the business operations will be disrupted. Mitigation steps can help to reduce the likelihood of the disruption and reduce the impact of the disruption to the rest of the business, if it occurs.

Disruption doesn't need to be anything as large as a regional earthquake. It could be a round of flu that has your staffing levels seriously depleted due to employee illness.

Some common mitigation steps:

  •  Cross-train employees to fill in for absent employees
  •  Store data back-ups off-site
  •  Store vital records off-site
  •  Make sure your data-server room has an appropriate fire suppression system (NOT water).
  •  Develop alternate facilities plans in case you have to move
  •  Store heavy items on lower shelves
  •  Mount bookcases, cabinets, etc to walls
  •  Mount wall art securely so it doesn't come off the wall
  •  Secure breakables with museum putty
  •  Consider swapping older, heavier CRT-style monitors for smaller, lighter LCD ones.
  •  Strap down computers and other electronics so they will not fall during an earthquake.
  •  At home: know how to turn off your utilities if needed.
  •  At home: strap down the water heater or convert to a tank-less water heater.

How to justify mitigation? Consider this: according to a 2006 presentation by the Houston Area Research Center (HARC), every one dollar spent in mitigation saves seven dollars in recovery.

    
UWEM Business Continuity Management News
 

Business Continuity Piliot Project Nearing Completion - Participating departments in the UW Business Continuity Management Pilot Project are conducting their final table top exercises to test some of thier core planning. The exercises introduce an earthquake scenario with a variety of disruptions and then leads the groups through a facilitated discussion. After the exercise, we lead the group through a "Hot-Wash" to learn what worked, what needs improvement and how we can apply the lessons learned to the planning model. The University of Washington has identified Business Continuity Management as one of the top priorities for University preparedness and All-Hazards planning.

 

NEW Business Continuity Managment Web Site - The New Look and Feel of BCM


 

UWEM Business Continuity Management Events

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