The news is full of efforts to develop a vaccine effective against COVID-19. Your company also needs to be vaccinated against the impacts of communicable disease and the best way to do this is for your leaders to develop a good pandemic plan. In today’s post, we’ll look at the four main components of such a plan.
In the old days six months ago, our business continuity consulting clients used to laugh when we said their BC plans should include a plan regarding what they would do if a pandemic struck.
Nowadays, the hard reality and destructive power of a fast-moving infectious disease is apparent to almost everyone.
If you want to read a prescient post, check out this one from MHA Consulting’s Richard Long: Not If But When: Is Your Company Ready for the Next Global Pandemic? It was published on January 2, 2019, almost a year to the day before the WHO said people in Wuhan, China, were getting sick from a mysterious new illness.
In some respects, the horse is out of the barn regarding COVID-19. In the current pandemic, it’s too late for plans and preparations. Most companies are in a posture of adapting on the fly in terms of having employees work from home, reconfiguring the workplace, bringing employees back, and protecting people’s safety.
However, the threat of infectious disease will outlive the current coronavirus outbreak.
To update an old saying: Surprise me once, shame on you. Surprise me twice, shame on me.
Responsible leaders understand that, even as they’re trying to steer their organizations through the current pandemic, they need to prepare them for possible future disease outbreaks.
From now on, every business continuity plan must include a pandemic plan.
Such plans need to be flexible, adaptable, and comprehensible. (The flip side of the company that has no pandemic plan is the company whose pandemic plan is so technical, you need to be an M.D. to grasp it.)
Your pandemic plan should be focused on protecting the organization’s people and customers and keeping its critical operations going in the event a communicable disease is at large in the community, sickening workers or their dependents, impacting work spaces, and impeding operations.
Pandemic planning should be incorporated into every aspect of business recovery planning, not just crisis management. The BC plans for the organization’s IT/disaster recovery program, business processes, and supply chain should all include instructions on what to do if there’s a pandemic.
I previously mentioned two types of pandemic plans: the nonexistent kind and the type that are so complex only a doctor can understand them.
A better kind of pandemic plan addresses four key areas as laid out below.
Hopefully, we will soon have a vaccine offering protection against COVID-19. A vaccine is already available for organizations to provide them a comparable sort of protection: a pandemic plan for the organization that addresses every aspect of the business from IT/DR to supply chains, and which covers the four areas of vigilance and preparation, strategy, contingencies, and testing.