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Business Continuity Awareness Week (BCAW) May 13-17 2019

Business Continuity Awareness Week (BCAW) is an annual global event that is facilitated by the BCI and is a key vehicle to raising the awareness of the profession and demonstrating the value effective business continuity management can have to organizations of all types of sizes. This year's theme is "Investing in Resilience." https://www.thebci.org/event-detail/event-calendar/bcaw2019.html #businesscontinuity #resilience

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What Is Adaptive Business Continuity (BC) And How Is it Different?

Adaptive Business Continuity is a flexible in comparison to traditional continuity planning. Its focus is the continuous improvement of an organization’s capabilities to recover from disruption and disaster. In addition to this, adaptive BC can be effective in organizations with vastly different cultures and program maturity levels. Adaptive BC draws concepts from project management and process…

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NEDRIX Annual Spring Conference

NEDRIX conferences are informal events that are put together with you in mind. Everyone from beginners to experts in the industry participate, make connections, draw inspiration, share information, and impact the business continuity landscape. The Annual Spring 2019 Conference is a one day event. Your registration includes breakfast, lunch, exhibitor tables and all sessions. Check back…

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Adaptive Business Continuity: A NEW Approach

Have you begun to question traditional best practices in business continuity (BC)? Do you seem to be concentrating on documentation rather than preparedness? Compliance rather than recoverability? Do your efforts provide true business value? If you have these concerns, David Lindstedt and Mark Armour offer a solution in Adaptive Business Continuity: A New Approach. This ground-breaking book provides a streamlined, realistic methodology to change BC dramatically.

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FREE CHAPTER: Business Continuity Project Startup and Management

How Do You Start Up and Manage YOUR Business Continuity Project?

Find out NOW with your FREE Chapter!

If your organization is starting out on Business Continuity Management, the enormity of the tasks that lie ahead of you can seem overwhelming. That is why it is crucially important to get the scope right, to set realistic limits for the early projects, and to put these within an overall program that will eventually lead to an integrated, comprehensive approach to protect the total assets of the enterprise. The only way to eat the Business Continuity elephant is “a bite at a time.” This FREE chapter shows how to prepare and manage YOUR business continuity project.

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Are You Wasting Your Full Business Continuity Potential?

Adaptive Business Continuity may deliver value 11 to 18 times faster than traditional BC practices. By staying with Traditional Business Continuity practices that date back to IBM mainframes and Y2K, practices that have yet to catch up to Lean, Six Sigma, Agile, Management 3.0, and the nature of life in 2018, you are significantly limiting your potential as a BC professional. An approach that empowered you to be twice or three times more efficient in your professional role would most most certainly warrant some consideration -- one that offered ELEVEN times more productivity, eleven times more value for your efforts, demands attention.

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Business Continuity Awareness Week

BCI Manifesto for Organizational Resilience

The world is an ever-changing landscape in terms of risk, and as these changes happen, the business continuity and resilience industry must evolve. The BCI is proud to be a part of this evolution and we are releasing our Manifesto for Organizational Resilience during Business Continuity Awareness Week (BCAW) 2018. The manifesto positions us within the organizational resilience sphere; not as the ‘know-all’ organization, but as a central point for collaboration across all management disciplines.

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The Unbearable Lightness of BC-ing

 The move from Traditional to Adaptive Business Continuity (BC) may be uncomfortable for a number of reasons, but perhaps the most uncomfortable change concerns the general elimination of documentation as a deliverable.
Traditional BC centers almost entirely around documentation. The practitioner begins by obtaining full executive approval, then creates the BC policy document, "the key document that sets out the purpose, context, scope, and governance of the business continuity programme" (BCI GPG p.14). The practitioner then generates an RA, and, from one to four types of BIAs (ibid p.38). The center of the Traditional BC universe is the plan. The job of the BC practitioner is to create the plan, make sure everyone is familiar with the plan, and then update the plan on a regular basis. Tests are then conducted to validate "that the plans are current, accurate, effective, and complete" (ibid p.87). All these documentation activities most likely take place for every department (or process!) within the organization, thus resulting in mounds of proverbial "shelfware." In stark contrast, the Adaptive BC approach focuses on recovery capabilities.

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Business Continuity Awareness Week

BCI Manifesto for Organizational Resilience

The world is an ever-changing landscape in terms of risk, and as these changes happen, the business continuity and resilience industry must evolve. The BCI is proud to be a part of this evolution and we are releasing our Manifesto for Organizational Resilience during Business Continuity Awareness Week (BCAW) 2018. The manifesto positions us within the organizational resilience sphere; not as the ‘know-all’ organization, but as a central point for collaboration across all management disciplines.

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On Stones, Clay and Rubber Balls, by Mark Armour

Why we need to agree on our definitions and change our thinking around risk management, business continuity and resilience.

First, this is not about where the responsibility for business continuity should reside within an organization. It is about the responsibilities of the business continuity profession and its practitioners. Lately, I’ve witnessed the practice of risk management begin to take over that of business continuity. Many practitioners promote this alignment and foster the perception that business continuity is simply a part of the practice of risk management. I say this is bad for both disciplines and the organizations they serve.

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