Rhand Leal
November 5, 2019
The new revision of ISO 22301 was finally published on October 31, 2019, and you are probably asking yourself whether you need to implement the whole standard all over again. Well, a new implementation is not quite necessary – although the 2019 revision did bring some changes, they are not so drastic. For differences between the 2019 and 2012 versions, see this Infographic ISO 22301:2012 vs. ISO 22301:2019 revision – What has changed?
First of all, let’s see how much time you have. According to UKAS, companies already certified against the ISO 22301 2012 revision will have a transition period of three years to “upgrade” their Business Continuity Management System (BCMS) to the new 2019 revision.
Since the 2019 revision was published on October 30, 2019, this means that according to UKAS, companies will be able to transition until October 31, 2022. If your existing ISO 22301 certificate expires after October 31, 2022, then the certification bodies will check if you are compliant with the new revision during the regular surveillance visits; if your certificate expires before October 31, 2022, then you must transition by your next re-certification.
“More streamlined and practical.” These words define well what this new 2019 revision of ISO 22301 brings for business continuity management.
For more information about mandatory documents and records for the 2019 revision of ISO 22301, please read: Mandatory documents required by ISO 22301 revision 2019.
Most changes in the 2019 revision aimed to make the standard less complex, and only one new small clause was included (6.3), so you may be wondering what is needed for a successful transition to the 2019 revision of the standard.
In fact, this could be hardly called a “transition” at all. All the changes to be made to fill gaps are not enough to justify a project-based approach like you might use for transitions of other management standards, like was the case with the ISO 27001 2005 revision to the 2013 revision.
This situation is closer to the regular effort of maintaining your compliance with the standard, where you can plan less-complex activities to make the few smaller adaptations to achieve compliance with the new revision of the standard.
And, this is it. It might seem like there’s little to do (clauses like document control, performance evaluation, and continual improvement basically did not change), but that’s because:
These changes in the standard really do make sense – they will not only bring your Business Continuity Management System (BCMS) closer to the needs of your business, but you will also have a system in place to show the usefulness of your business continuity management.
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