Title: Building A Resilient Enterprise
1Building A Resilient Enterprise
We must become the change we seek in the world
Mahatma Ghandhi
Presented by Leonard Gravesande, Vice
President, MBA, BBA, CBCP JP MorganChase, Associa
tion of Contingency Planners,
New York City Chapter, Executive Board Member
November 15, 2007
2Introduction
- High impact, low probability threats require a
new thinking and a new model for survivability. - Traditional disaster recovery and business
continuity models are under attack and under
pressure to change. - 911, Hurricane Katrina, the northeast blackout
exposed major gaps in critical planning
assumptions upon which many recovery strategies
and plans were built. - The avian flu, evolving changes in regulatory
compliance, globalization and the frequency of
threats to our environment, all present enormous
challenges for enterprises.
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3Purpose
- To challenge the traditional business continuity
management frameworks and stimulate new thinking
about resiliency model consideration. - To raise heightened awareness of business
resiliency and its benefits. - To present a common reference point for
resiliency understanding, communication,
successful planning and implementation. - To offer an evolutionary framework, methodology
and an integrated holistic approach relative to
resiliency planning.
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4Context
- This discussion will be descriptive illustrating
what needs to be considered as opposed to being
prescriptive (i.e., how to do it). - Practitioners can leverage the descriptive
elements and tailor the actionable steps aligned
to a supportive organization culture and risk
management philosophy to build resiliency
capabilities into the fabric of their
organizations.
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5What is resiliency?
-
- Resiliency, as defined by Websters
International, is the property of being
resilient, moving swiftly back and capable of
withstanding shock without deformation. - According to professor Yossi Sheffi from MIT, it
is not an event but a process. - A resilient enterprise is one that is
characterized by a culture of leadership,
flexibility, empowerment, and communications
guided by some core principles to sustain the
business-critical mission following a major
disruptive event. -
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6Key Considerations
- How can enterprises plan for random as well as
intentional threats that have a potentially
significant impact to their core business
mission? - What strategies are necessary and needed to
navigate the high impact, low probability threat
landscape? - How can enterprises transform the strategic
resiliency vision and imperatives into a set of
viable capabilities for sustainability and
competitive advantage?
7Resiliency Planning Assumptions
- Enterprises are at risk for different types of
disasters and disruptive events and have some
level of preparedness to mitigate the threats. - Each enterprise will leverage and optimize
existing resources while planning for the future. -
- While each enterprise has its own history,
culture and way of doing things, change will not
come easy. - The realities of the regulatory environment,
leadership commitment, current capabilities
assessment, future capabilities targets, risk
management philosophy and associated investments,
will shape the scope, approach and roadmap for
successful planning, implementation and ongoing
management of the resiliency strategy.
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8Whats wrong with existing IT-centric DR and
Business Continuity Models?
- IT DR models are single purposed, technology
focused and not readily and easily adaptable to
event and regulatory compliance-driven changes. -
- Alternatively, in a number of existing Business
Continuity models, the primary focus is on
business process and people recovery with a
dependent technology architecture and support
infrastructure. However, in many cases, plans
are developed in isolation of the strategic value
chain partners and seldom aligned to business
drivers and full resumption of mission. -
- The above-referenced models are rarely
pro-active, rigid, costly to maintain and devoid
of clear unambiguous expression of risks, their
cause, impact and consequences.
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9Why resiliency maturity models?
- Resiliency maturity models
- are forward-looking, opportunity-oriented, and
capabilities as well as decision based. - enable a more agile response to dynamic changing
conditions. - are a natural extension of the existing business
processes and capabilities. - enable a structured approach and methodology
designed to mitigate failure risks and contain,
if not, negate headline risk. - are continuously subject to re-evaluation and
improvements.
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10Illustrative lessons of resiliency
- Phillips Electronics production plant fire in
March 2000 - Nokia and Ericsson impacted with different
outcomes. - Leading financial services response to hurricane
events - Well developed strategies and plans protect
lives and sustain expected levels of service with
little or no business impact by transferring work
and not people to unaffected zones. - Sub-prime mortgages and financial credit
meltdown - Headline risk cripples the leadership at 2 major
investment firms as market cap plunges, while
other financial services have successfully
deflected perceptions of a crisis of confidence,
thus avoiding a similar fate. - US Coastguard and Hurricane Katrina
- Before the storm hit Louisiana, the U.S Coast
Guard pro-actively moved assets to Louisiana
saving countess lives.
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11Barriers to successful implementation
- Vision (Leadership)
- Resiliency is rarely placed on the strategic
agenda of top management and in some instances
inadequately funded. - Unlike daily trading and other core revenue
generating service related activities, resiliency
considerations are often perceived as expense
related activities with lower strategic value. - People (Management)
- Generally, staff not briefed in. Only a small
part of the workforce understands the strategy
and resiliency mission. - Risk and change management practices not endemic
within the culture. - Failure to empower staff to make decisions during
a crisis. - There is a State of Denial regarding the
viability of existing plans. - Process
- Failure to understand and validate the process
flow and crisply define requirements and organize
work around virtual or global teams. - Technology
- Mis-alignment of business and technology
strategies and priorities.
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12Resiliency Framework
- Organization/governance structure with a program
oversight charter - Senior management commitment and sponsorship
- Sound business case with a balanced risk/cost
analysis and value-oriented benefits for goal
alignment and resiliency program funding - Developed and articulated communication strategy
and plan - Guiding principles, policy and standards to drive
the prescribed resiliency goal objectives - A holistic integrated program that incorporates
not only strong governance oversight, but also
human resource management, crisis management,
risk assessment and management, legal and
compliance management, vendor and service
provider management, change management and
testing, subject to continuous measurement,
reporting and refinement.
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13Implementation considerations
- Identify resiliency maturity model framework and
gain executive commitment to use that framework
as the basis of scoping and approach for moving
forward. - Benchmark where your existing capabilities are
and determine where your enterprise wants to go
over a specific time horizon. - Understand your environment (i.e., your business
mission and drivers, your risks, and available
resources). - Adopt and leverage existing enterprise change
management principles and tools from ITIL or
similar quality control process improvement
tools.
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14What are the requisite strategies?
- Enhance and aggressively promote the requisite
resiliency culture change by defining or
re-affirming the organizations shared values,
unity of purpose and provide incentives designed
to remove the resiliency barriers. - Effectively manage people, process and technology
risks through resiliency. - Communicate continuously to stakeholders and
reinforce the core resiliency mission, value
proposition and purpose of action.
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15Translating strategies to solutions
- Leverage a holistic approach for planning.
- Engage all partners along the value chain
continuum and - Collaborate, collaborate, collaborate.
- Develop a unified plan with multi-disciplinary
cross functional teams and subject matter experts
for the optimal solution set. - Abstract and present an easy to understand visual
resiliency framework. -
- Build highly networked communications
infrastructure and design-in redundancy,
diversity, and operational flexibility.
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16Translating strategies into solutions
- Leverage standardized facilities where applicable
and develop concurrent processes. - Build upon and expand plans that were developed
for DR and BC. - Develop or enhance policies, standards,
procedures and response activities, including but
not limited to, surveillance and early warning
signals, pre-defined triggers and decision
points, and communications. - Assess maturity level of your program on an
ongoing basis using the capability maturity model
or like-kind benchmarking model and continuously
refine as warranted.
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17When disaster actually strikes
- Its time for crisis management leadership
- Knowing what to do can be the difference between
calm and courage, life and death, survival or
extinction. - Having a crisis management system in place in
advance is key. - Sense and correctly interpret the signals
relative to the threat and impact to the
enterprises operations. - There is an urgency to act, including rapid
decision making. Decisions may have to be made by
empowered staff at the front lines or periphery
of the disaster. - Communication to stakeholders including partners
must be timely and accurate.
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18When disaster actually strikes
- Be mindful that it is not what actually
happened that matters but what others perceived
have happened that matters. - Move rapidly to address employee and visitor well
being, protect assets, minimize emotional trauma,
limit damage and resume operations. - Deploy resources commensurate with strategy and
the developed unified plan. - Increase or decrease production or services as
conditions warrant. -
- Continuously monitor and manage mitigation,
response and recovery activities until full
business resumption. - Conduct post event lessons learned exercise for
knowledge transfer and improvements to resiliency
program.
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19Summary
- Resiliency maturity models are an evolving
concept - These models are being introduced to address the
limitations of the current BC and DR models. - Successful planning, implementation and ongoing
management will depend on acquiring a richer
understanding of existing capabilities, future
target capabilities and building a framework,
guiding principles and management system to
support the resiliency strategies and
capabilities. - The journey towards building a more resiliency
enterprise will not happen overnight. - However, adopting the framework and management
system will help enterprises reach the ultimate
resiliency destination sooner rather than later. -
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20Questions and Answers