Protection and Security Protecting and Recovering Vital Records from Disaster
A Practical Approach to business continuity by Iron Mountain
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita have put the spotlight on the necessity of protecting and recovering vital records. Vital records are the records that contain information critical to the continuation or survival of your company during or immediately following a crisis. They can be paper records, database records, e-mail with attachments, voice mail, instant messages, or any other official record documenting company business.
Proper protection of these records starts with proper planning. Here is our recommended planning approach to protecting your company's vital records against all disasters - natural or man-made.
One: Designate a Vital Records Programme “Owner”
For your vital records programme to succeed there must be one individual accountable for planning and maintaining the programme. The business continuity or records manager are likely candidates due to their involvement with records programmes or business continuity planning. You also need a clear definition of responsibilities between records management, business continuity, risk management, and emergency preparedness.
Two: Assess Your Current Vital Record Programme
The next step is to determine what (if any) vital records or risk assessment programmes already exist within the organisation. If these programs do exist, examine how much of this work can be leveraged for a comprehensive vital records programme. Typical departments to consider are:
2. Identify and Assess Vital Records
Conduct surveys of business functions to document business function records, and collect information to identify and assess vital records. The following three risk categories should be included in the assessment survey: · Probability of loss or damage.
3. Create an initial plan to protect and recover your vital records
Build your initial vital records recovery plan with the following in mind:
4. Maintain and Update Your Vital Records Plan
Vital records are dynamic and change with the business, so your vital records plan needs to be updated on a regular basis. Keep your plan up to date by remembering to:
Summary
Vital records are essential for the recovery of any business. If you follow this pragmatic approach, a disaster doesn't have to mean you can't quickly recover the most vital records you need to keep your business running.
This article was adopted from, Business Continuity Relies on Records, by Gary Rossell, a senior consultant with Iron Mountain. Iron Mountain will be exhibiting at Business Continuity Expo.