Crisis management, public relations, and business continuity are tested during a disaster event. Today, we’re analyzing business continuity plans and disaster response to determine a good public relations response vs. a bad one.
For today’s post, I thought we might try something new. Rather than write a formal article, I wanted to share some things with you that have been on my mind lately about business continuity and disaster recovery.
I have been observing other organizations’ disaster response efforts from the outside and trying to work out what’s really going on based on what we see in the media, as well as about what separates a good public relations response to a crisis from a bad one. I’ll touch on these and other topics below.
Every now and then in this business things happen just the way they are supposed to: a company you’ve worked with takes a punch, and with the aid of the business continuity plan that you wrote with them, the situation is dealt with effectively, the disruption is minimized, and the company quickly gets back on track. That’s a satisfying thing to be part of.
Stories like these will give you an idea of why I’ve found this such a satisfying field to work in for almost two decades.
Here’s another story, unrelated to any of the incidents described above. Once we were conducting a mock disaster for a client to test their continuity plan, and one of the key participants objected to the scenario we proposed. We asked him what was wrong with it. “Your disaster doesn’t fit my plan,” he replied.
Here’s a word to the wise: The real-life disasters that come at you never fit your plan.
Building on the above, here are a few more words to the wise:
I’ve been in this field for over 25 years, and one thing I’ve learned from going to industry events and talking to people around the country: getting companies to set up BCM programs and implement well-thought-out plans and strategies is an ongoing struggle almost across the board.
A lot of companies that you would assume have their act together in terms of business continuity (based on the fact that they are highly touted, highly respected blue-chip companies) actually are not well-prepared to deal with disaster. A lot goes wrong behind the scenes at these companies, and sometimes there’s real chaos. Probably 10 percent of companies are well-prepared for disruptions. In most cases, the disaster response is not as good as you assume it would be.
For examples of organizations that struggle mightily with business continuity, we need look no further than these industries that typically lag in BCM readiness:
You know the old saying about how the three most important things in real estate are location, location, location? I’m tempted to say that in business continuity, the three most important things are testing, testing, testing. That’s not exactly the case, but it’s close.
A disaster recovery plan is great. A disaster recovery plan that has been tested and found to work is gold.
One of the interesting facts of life in the disaster recovery business is the unevenness of the amount of information about disasters that comes into the public eye. We learn a lot about what happens in disasters involving government agencies. We learn a moderate amount about disasters that occur in the private sector where there’s a major consumer impact, prompting a lot of interest from the media. But the vast majority of disasters occur out of the public eye. They occur and are managed without outsiders ever knowing about them. Often, even those of us involved in writing disaster recovery plans for different companies are not informed when there’s an incident and those plans are put into action.
It may be true that you can’t judge a book by its cover, but I have observed over the years that it is pretty safe to judge an organization’s disaster response efforts by how well it fields media inquiries about the disaster. If the company handles the press part well, it’s usually safe to assume they’re doing a lot of other things right behind the scenes.
What are the hallmarks of a good press operation in a disaster response situation? Here are a few:
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