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What Was New in ’22: The BCM Year in Review

MHA Consulting

The year 2022 saw the tapering off of the pandemic, the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, an ongoing wave of cyberattacks, continuing supply chain woes, and a renewed focus by organizations on identifying and protecting their most essential business processes. Read on to learn about the BCM year in review.

BCM 52
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What to Expect in Business Continuity Employment for the Last Half of 2021

Castellan

business continuity industry saw an average of about 20-25 new job postings each week , with about 30-35 on average internationally. While other industries around the globe struggled to adapt—and many experienced unprecedented job losses—business continuity managed to thrive and grow. The outlook is promising.

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BCM Basics: Business Continuity vs. Business Resilience 

MHA Consulting

This post is part of BCM Basics, a series of occasional, entry-level blogs on some of the key concepts in business continuity management. The terms business continuity and business resilience are superficially similar and a world apart.

BCM 95
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The 9 Best Books for Disaster Recovery Managers in 2022

Solutions Review

There are plenty of free resources available online (such as Solutions Review’s Disaster Recovery as a Service Buyer’s Guide, Data Protection Buyer’s Guide, Backup and Disaster Recovery Buyer’s Guide, Data Protection Vendor Comparison Map, and best practices section ), but sometimes it’s best to do things the old-fashioned way.

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Why I no longer look at financial impacts when conducting a BIA

Plan B Consulting

When I first started in business continuity twenty years ago, financial impacts were a key part of the BIA excel spreadsheet and there were a series of boxes looking at financial impact over time. This was done for every activity and served as a key justification for the cost and effort in rolling out business continuity.

Fashion 52
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Why I no longer look at financial impacts when conducting a BIA

Plan B Consulting

When I first started in business continuity twenty years ago, financial impacts were a key part of the BIA excel spreadsheet and there were a series of boxes looking at financial impact over time. This was done for every activity and served as a key justification for the cost and effort in rolling out business continuity.

Fashion 52