Some of the UK's largest firms are unprepared for disasters such as flooding,
IT failures and terrorism, research from
IDC
has claimed.
The figures, commissioned by
BT
Global Services, revealed that 71 per cent of businesses do have an
emergency recovery plan in place, but 21 per cent of the largest firms in the UK
have no plans in place.
However one in three respondents plan to increase their business continuity
spending in 2008 despite the threat of an economic downturn, according to the
research.
IDC also claimed that business continuity accountability is rising up the
corporate ladder with the overall leadership team of businesses being
increasingly involved in the key decisions surrounding business continuity - 49
per cent chief executives and 36 per cent IT directors.
Ed Cordin, EMEA consulting director at IDC, said: "The research shows that
many business leadership teams are now taking notice of the business continuity
issue. That is an important development because keeping the business running,
come what may, has to be a key board-level concern not just one of IT. That
said, the alignment between aspiration, accountability and decision making still
requires significant attention in many organisations. Likewise organisations
that do not possess detailed business continuity plans need to act now.”
Ray Stanton, global head of business continuity, security & governance
practice, at BT Global Services, said: “It is interesting to see that so many
businesses plan to up spending in such a tough climate. However, businesses need
to think carefully about how to spend that money. The right business continuity
investments do not just protect against threats, they help to build customer
confidence and enhance the brand. In contrast, by failing to get the basics
right, businesses risk jeopardising not only the short-term ability to maintain
operations – but also longer-term growth.”
“Business continuity planning should encompass technology, human resources
and customer service issues. So it is encouraging to see that so many businesses
have now developed emergency recovery plans, because they go beyond pure IT and
communications matters,” concluded Stanton.
Further Reading:
BT
tactics come under new fire
Comments
Have your say on this article