You’ve spent weeks collecting data, coordinating interviews, and compiling reports. You step into the business impact analysis (BIA) presentation confident you did everything right only to hear leadership say, “We don’t agree with the results.”
Sound familiar? It’s a common scenario and it’s rarely about the data.
In a recent webinar, “Misunderstood Data. Missed Decisions. Let's Fix Your BIA”, I broke down why BIAs so often fall apart. The problem is usually the process: misaligned expectations, unclear assumptions, and breakdowns in communication.
In this post, we’ve distilled the key takeaways and recommendations from that session.
Let’s call it what it is: BIAs fail when decisions get missed. And that happens when key people don’t trust the process or don’t understand it.
I recently had a BIA project at a major construction firm. Despite following their standard process, pre-work, interviews, communication, and validation, executives rejected the findings outright.
Why? They misunderstood the assumptions and expected the BIA to account for existing workarounds, which it shouldn’t. They were focused on a cyber scenario instead of an event-neutral disruption.
The problem wasn’t a process failure. There was a disconnect between the methodology and the leadership’s expectations.
And it’s not just a one-off. This kind of breakdown happens all the time. It usually shows up in one (or more) of the following ways:
Here are five common reasons things go sideways during your BIAs:
If your BIA results are constantly being questioned, or worse, ignored, the issue usually isn’t the data. It’s how you’re collecting, framing, and communicating it.
Here’s how to run a BIA that your executives will actually trust and use:
Before launching your BIA, hold a dedicated session with key stakeholders, especially the executive sponsor and IT. Cover:
This step is key, even an experienced BCM manager can struggle with misalignment. It often happens because management nods along but doesn’t actually understand what they’re signing off on.
Don’t rely on sending a document explaining your BIA. Nobody will read it. Present it, walk stakeholders through examples, and confirm understanding.
Trying to launch a full-scale BIA across the company, especially if it hasn’t been done recently, is a recipe for overload.
Instead:
Pilots reveal hidden landmines, such as interview gaps, unclear weighting, or misunderstood impact categories, without the risk of blowing up the whole engagement.
Before listing business units, start with the value chain.
Why?
This approach is how my business continuity consulting company, MHA Consulting, does every BIA engagement. It helps teams visualize how each department contributes to the organization’s outputs and helps make tough scoping decisions much easier to defend.
Here’s the fix for rushed, chaotic interviews: separate the pre-work.
This split reduces session time and improves data quality. Participants arrive more prepared. Interviews become cleaner and more focused and you avoid the "25 processes in one spreadsheet" nightmare that comes when people wing it.
Free Download | A Step-By-Step Business Impact Analysis Checklist
No platform can fix a BIA if the person leading it doesn’t know how to guide the conversation. And when the interviews fall apart, it’s usually because the person leading the session wasn’t prepared.
What matters:
Good interviews drive good data. A solid BIA lead needs to be part analyst, part educator, and part project manager. They can’t rely on AI to do it for them.
Validation should happen throughout the BIA process.
Why it matters:
By the time you deliver your management report, nothing should feel new to anyone.
Video | This Is How You Fix Your BIA
A lot of teams think the right tool will fix a broken BIA process. It won’t.
We’ve seen companies switch tools mid-project, trying to solve alignment issues with automation. The result? More confusion arose because the problem was unclear assumptions, weak facilitation, or an inconsistent methodology.
That said, a strong platform can absolutely simplify the work if your process is already solid.
Discover how to choose BIA software.
BCMMetrics was designed with all of this in mind. It started as an internal toolset for MHA Consulting’s own consultants, and is now available for all business continuity experts.
It includes:
Here is an example of how to run a BIA in BCMMetrics.
BCMMetrics takes the guesswork and rework out of running a BIA. It gives business continuity teams a faster, clearer path to results leadership will trust and act on without the spreadsheet chaos or endless follow‑ups.
Book your free demo to discover how it helps you run a BIA that works and gets used.