Your IT Department

Revisit Business Continuity Plans

As Coronavirus infection numbers fall many countries are beginning to lift restrictions in an attempt to return to โ€œnormal.โ€ Yet many experts predict things will get bad again later this year. At least business has time to revisit Business Continuity Plans (BCP).

Maybe your business had a plan in place. Decision-makers laid out actions to take in the event of fire, flood, or devastating data breach. The plan didnโ€™t envision quarantine, but the planning worked well enough to keep your teams going.

Business Continuity Planning is a whole business process - involve as many people as possible and your technology provider

Or you might have been scrambling to get up and running quickly in the midst of a global lockdown. Still, after initial business disruption, you were able to get back to business (if not quite as usual).

Now, looking ahead, weโ€™re told to expect a second bout of lock down. Ensure you revisit business continuity plans urgently to prepare for another bout of the virus disrupting business.

What Worked?

BCP predicts various types of crises and suggest strategies for what to do when things go wrong. If you did BCP in advance, you weighed options and decided on the best attack without stress and urgency. Those reacting in the moment to mandates to shut down probably took more of a โ€œthis is the best we can doโ€ approach.

Either way, letโ€™s hope your business found some approaches and had positive results. Perhaps moving to cloud-based virtual desktop services smoothed the transition to remote work or installing a virtual private network (VPN) to secure off-site access paid off.

Identify all the strategies that were successful. If adopted as short-term solutions, you may want to explore their value long-term. Perhaps you contracted with a vendor for a temporary solution that worked well, this could cost less if you renegotiate for a longer duration. Perhaps something you tried with one team can roll out companywide to prepare for a second period of work from home.

What Needs Help?

Did you find any shortfalls that slowed work from home? What tech difficulties did your people face? Identify the problem areas, and look for solutions now.

Poor business continuity planning can lead to frustrated employees

Maybe you had employees working from home on corporate laptops or personal devices. They could be going back to the laundry room home office later this year. Is a laptop or home computer still the technology you want them using?

Were there issues with employees lacking bandwidth to get the job done? Was logging in difficult because your system only handles 25% of employees at a given time? You need a different level of service to support everybody at one time!

Maybe certain departments were able to adjust swiftly but others struggled. Identify tech challenges, and find solutions to remove friction if we do have to work from home again.

Make Changes Now

Updating your continuity plan is prudent, so make the moves now to prepare. Do it while businesses are open and able to work freely. An IT partner can often work remotely, but many tasks are more efficient on-site.

The first wave of COVID-19 taught us valuable lessons; don’t be caught off guard twice.

Your people might have been more productive with remote tech, so set up the systems to secure and support a long-term solution.

How We Can Help

At Your IT Department we were able to get around 1800 users working remotely within very short time span. From VPN’s, to full Cloud Desktop systems or via Microsoft 365 business interruption was kept to an absolute minimum for our clients.

We can review your needs, provide you with expert advice and help you put in place an effective Business Continuity Plan which will keep your business operating whatever the future might hold.

To arrange a free review contact us today on 0115 8220200 or complete our Contact Form.