Are you 100% confident that the pitch you’re preparing for your business continuity plan will result in full management support?
For most business continuity (BC) practitioners, the answer is usually no.
Why is it so difficult to convey the value of your business continuity program to higher-ups? Because most organizations measure value by return on investment (ROI), making it difficult to evaluate initiatives—like BC—that don’t clearly add revenue to the bottom line. But that doesn’t mean there’s nothing you can do to win them over. A good business continuity plan by definition has several impactful payoffs that deliver value, as long as your organization puts in the time to get it right.
But it all starts with you—the business continuity program manager. Following are my recommendations on how to set yourself up for success as you start formulating your pitch.
There are three components to the knowledge-gathering phase:
Using the information you gathered above, think of a short scenario (10-15 minutes) you could use to demonstrate the need for business continuity plans for your critical operations. The disruption could be either direct (i.e., fire, hurricane, etc.) or indirect (a critical supplier failure, for instance). Run through the impacts of such a scenario—on people, processes, and technology—without business continuity plans, and determine their significance.
Then, run the scenario again, this time with a BC process in place. Determine how the different components of BC (crisis management, business recovery, and disaster recovery) minimize the impacts to people, processes, and technology, and how they affect the continued operations of the company.
For your actual pitch to management, keep these three things in mind:
Learning to speak management’s language is the key to gaining their support. While the above steps are a good start in formulating your management pitch, you’ll need much more than that to completely win them over.
We’ve created this free guide outlining the numerous ways you can tie your business continuity program to the company’s bottom line. It also includes information on how to put an ROI-like value on your program, and a checklist with all the necessary talking points for your management presentation. With this guide in hand, you can be 100% confident in your pitch—and well on your way to getting the support your program needs.