Continuity Planning Outline
This example is meant to convey the typical content of a detailed continuity plan.
The format will vary for each organization. (There is no one size fits all plan.) Components
may be combined in lists, matrices, or charts. Not all components of this outline will
apply to all organizations. The planning process is in the development of the continuity
plan not just the documentation of the plan. Continuity planning should be a process
and not just a one-time start stop project. To be successful it must be driven and supported
from the very top of the origination. Continuity planning is a management process it
is not a technical solution.
I. Initiation
-
Work group or team membership and objective
- Roles and responsibilities for planning, plan approval, and quality
assurance
- List of services confirmed as vital
- Strategy and schedule for planning
- Continuity planning processes and protocols
- Progress reporting
- Plan review
- Plan approval
- Issue resolution process
- Communication and coordination strategy with relevant intra and inter-agency
organizations (including local
government and community organizations)
- Affirmation of executive support
- Assessment of current disaster recovery or emergency preparedness plans
II. Business Impact Analysis
- Minimum Acceptable Levels of Service
- List (or matrix) of service dependencies
- List of service interfaces
- Commitments to other organizations (specific
services and service levels)
- Minimum acceptable levels of service and/or
output which could be tolerated under extraneous circumstances
- List (or matrix) of components critical to
support minimum levels of service
- Executive approval for minimum acceptable
service levels
- Failure scenarios (potential risks)
- Window of vulnerability (time period
during which the service may be at risk)
- Assessment of internal remediation effort
status and likelihood to be complete on time
- Assessment of reliance on, and condition of
external services, suppliers and dependencies (confidence in continued
availability of resource)
- Potential failure scenarios with likelihood
of occurrence
- Impact of each failure scenario on vital business services
with likelihood of occurrence
- List or matrix of impact of each scenario
on vital business services with likelihood of occurrence
- Services for which contingency plans will be developed
- List of services and the scope of
contingency required (specific components or systems supporting the service that require
contingencies)
- Executive approval of continuity scope
III. Continuity Planning
- Relevant continuity efforts of local and/or regional
partners
- Continuity strategies
- List of services, components (if applicable), considered contingencies which
support them and the benefit of the continuity
- Considered contingencies and required resources
- Assessment of considered contingencies
- How well the continuity mitigates risks of disruption to service?
- Assessment of time required acquiring, testing and implementing the continuity
- Sustainability of continuity within resource constraints
- Executive approval for continuity strategies
- Detailed continuity plans (for each contingency)
- Contingency objective and scope
- Contingency triggers
- Schedule for preparation and deployment of
contingency
- Monitoring strategies to ensure
identification of triggering events
- Roles and responsibilities for contingency
preparation and deployment (including updated contacts, contact mechanism
and numbers)
- Status reporting processes and protocols
- Instructions to carry out contingency
- Coordination strategy with local and
regional organizations (if applicable)
- Required resources and estimated costs
- Agreements and assumptions with suppliers
on whom each contingency is dependent
- Communications strategy
- Business resumption strategy
- Criteria for business resumption
- Priorities, processes and resources for business resumption
- Roles and responsibilities
- When to resume
- What to resume
- How to resume
- Validation/testing strategy for contingencies and business resumption
- Which components will be tested?
- Members of test team(s)
- Validation/testing plans
- Objectives
- Approach
- Required equipment and resources
- Necessary personnel
- Schedules and locations
- Procedures
- Expected results
- Acceptance criteria
- Validation/testing results (Assessment of capability of contingencies and business
resumption)
- Adequacy to support vital service
- Capacity to manage, record and track continuity activities
- Adequacy of controls
- Adequacy of resource availability to implement and sustain contingencies
- Adequacy of business resumption activities
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Page last modified on:
June 14, 2007