Rhand Leal
December 19, 2016
Disasters and disruptive business incidents push people and organizations to their limits, and one of the first impacted elements are communication systems.
Depending on incident type and magnitude, increased demand for communication, or communication infrastructure capability reduction, may render communication impossible, adding more confusion to an already chaotic situation.
ISO 22301, one of the world’s leading frameworks for business continuity management, defines some requirements to help ensure communications continue to flow during disruptive incidents. This article will present these requirements, and how an organization should consider them to enhance its communication systems capability to support business continuity.
As mentioned before, you can consider two main reasons for communication systems failure:
Capability reduction: If the communication infrastructure is directly affected by the incident, its performance may be diminished to a point where it is impossible to use it (e.g., towers and communication links damaged by storms and installations of communication providers affected by fire or hacker attacks).
Increased demand: All communication systems are designed considering that only part of their users will demand them at any given time, but during a disruptive incident practically all users will demand the system. People trying to get or send news to their relatives, emergency services trying to coordinate their efforts to evacuate people and help the wounded, organizations trying to continue or recover their operations – depending on the system design, even a single one of these situations may be sufficient to crash the system.
For communications to support Business Continuity Plans (BCPs), the standard, in its clause 8.4.3 Warning and communication, requires an organization to maintain procedures to:
To ensure these procedures are fit for purpose and will be properly performed by the response teams, they should be periodically exercised and tested. For more information, see: How to perform business continuity exercising and testing according to ISO 22301.
Like in normal situations, managing information flow is the key to ensuring that the available infrastructure will be used where it is needed most, and for achieving this while considering a disruptive incident response, you should:
1) Make use of as much monitoring and detection points as possible: The larger the number of eyes, ears, and sensors you have, the faster you can identify and respond to conditions that can lead to a disruptive incident, or to a disruptive incident itself. You can accomplish this by:
2) Provide alternative routes and communication channels: An old proverb says that is not good to have all your eggs in one basket, and in a crisis situation, depending upon single communication elements that can become overloaded or unavailable can be fatal. To avoid this, you should:
3) Document the adopted solutions in your BCPs: All the benefits from the suggested solutions will be useless if the response teams do not know they exist and how to use them. For more information about planning a BCP, see Business continuity plan: How to structure it according to ISO 22301.
4) Periodically exercise and test people, procedures, and equipment: As stated in the previous section, exercising and testing are the best ways to evaluate whether all adopted solutions will work together as an integrated solution.
People fear what they do not know and what represents danger to them, and as social beings they will try to keep in touch with other people to feel safe. This can prove to be a very bad thing if they all start to use the same communication channels that professionals like you need to use to solve a crisis situation, or even worse, if there is no communication at all.
By adopting the requirements stated in ISO 22301, organizations will ensure the consideration of which kinds of solutions they will need to have, as well as guidelines on how to use them, so their communication systems can work properly and help them prevent and promptly address an incident situation.
Check out this free webinar: ISO 22301: An overview of the BCM implementation process to see how communication fits into overall business continuity planning.