Over the twenty years or so that I have been professionally engaged in the field of business continuity, I have noticed that most organizations fall into one of two categories when it comes to how they go about scheduling their BIAs.
One group schedules their BIAs following the same principles that most people use in making appointments to get their teeth cleaned: They schedule them months in advance, going by a rational timetable, which has been endorsed for sound reasons by well-informed people, and which is not in conflict with any other important obligations they might have.
This is, as you might know from experience, an efficient, low-drama method of making plans to efficiently take care of a chore which is not necessarily enjoyable, but which is clearly important to the long-term health of your organization.
The other group schedules their BIAs by using a much more haphazard, “catch-as-catch-can” method—a method similar, you might say, to that of a family scheduling their evacuation from their house once they discover that the garage has caught fire and the whole house is about to go up in flames.
I’ll give you three guesses regarding which approach to scheduling BIAs we see more often out in the field.
If you guessed Method B, you are correct.
Most organizations, unfortunately, take a reactive, lurching, “whenever” attitude toward scheduling their BIAs.
However, it is my strong recommendation that you try to move your organization toward an approach closer to Method A: Plan ahead, set up a recurring schedule, make doing BIAs part of your company’s routine.
I’ll spell it out in a bit more detail.
The best approach for scheduling your BIAs is to follow these four steps:
Is your organization highly dynamic, frequently seeing acquisitions or similar changes?
The goal is to make the conducting of BIAs, and the schedule on which you conduct them, part of the culture of your organization.
This approach brings with it numerous benefits.
It’s amazing how much more cooperative people are when you are not trying to shoehorn your way into their calendars on short notice but are instead following a familiar, recognized schedule.
To sum it up, doing BIA pre-work and interviews—just like going to the dentist—will never be most people’s definition of a good time. But if you can get your organization onto a rational, regular schedule for performing its BIAs, and follow this for an extended period of time, the process will become easier for everyone involved and the health of your organization’s business continuity plans will be that much better.