AEC Online
Printable version Bookmark this page Notify a colleague or friend about this page Bookmark and Share

BSI launches business continuity management system to help UAE companies deal with a crisis.

 
  Other News
  Subscribe to newsletter  
18 Mar 2008

Would your company survive if your office building collapsed, an earthquake shattered the local transport infrastructure or a new sub-prime crisis hit the financial markets? A new management system standard is being launched in the UAE so that every business can confidently answer ‘yes’ to these questions and survive an actual crisis.

BSI is introducing its Business Continuity Management (BCM) system, BS 25999-2, in the UAE to help companies prepare for the worst rather than hope for the best. Official launch events are taking place in Abu Dhabi and Dubai on the 26th and 27th March, 2008, respectively.

BCM is a process of managing the risks related to a company’s resilience to unexpected incidents; planning how to respond to events and how to recover afterwards. The BSI model has been well received since its launch in London, New York and Tokyo and has been eagerly anticipated by businesses in the Gulf region.

BSI is launching its Business Continuity Management System to help companies deal with and survive unforeseen crises.
BSI is launching its Business Continuity Management System to help companies deal with and survive unforeseen crises.

All organisations – from major international corporations to SMEs, from Government departments to hospitals – face a wide range of risks which change from year to year, season to season, and day to day and in all dimensions. For some companies, these risks are more obvious if operations are run in volatile markets, but for others, it is the unforeseen circumstances which can bring the business to stand still, never to start again.

The current upward trend in the price of crude oil is good news for some but also increases the risk profile of a lot of companies across the world. Companies should start modelling the oil price in their business risk models at US$200 per barrel to understand the risk it poses for their survival in 2008 and beyond.

According to a September 2007 BSI survey of one hundred of the FTSE 250, 58 per cent of companies said their business would be seriously affected in under a day in the event of disaster or disruption. In a 2006 UK Cabinet Office survey, almost half of the companies (44 per cent) reported they had no business continuity plan while only 2 per cent had a very robust plan.

“While the official term for dealing with unexpected events in the workplace is ‘business continuity’, in actuality, we are helping companies deal with business survival,” said Frank Post, Group Communications Director for BSI Group. “Figures have proven that companies which fail to resume normal trading after 30 days will most likely go out of business.

“The Business Continuity Management system will help companies in the UAE to cope with disasters, such as the recent extreme flooding we experienced in Dubai and the number of earthquakes in Sharjah. In today’s climate, businesses which want to survive must adopt robust continuity plans for their critical risks.”

Companies interested in learning more about BS 25999-2 can attend the official launch in Abu Dhabi and Dubai on 26th and 27th March 2008 respectively.



Skyscraper Banners