We had a conversation with one of our ISO 22301 Masters, Ms. Rinske Geerlings, who is the founder of Business As Usual in Australia. …

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We had a conversation with one of our ISO 22301 Masters, Ms. Rinske Geerlings, who is the founder of Business As Usual in Australia. …
While removing duplications, the revised standard has clearly distinguished the requirements (what) and the guidance (how). It should be noted that ISO 22313, a guidance document, will also be updated reflecting the changes of ISO 22301, and it will be published after the release of the new version of ISO…
Your goal is a mature, robust Business Continuity Management System – one of the key requirements for a more resilient organization. Significant amounts of time, effort, and energy have been invested, and the result is a program that aligns with ISO 22301 and meets organizational goals; one you may even…
Incident management and business continuity are an integral part of every successful company. The ability to survive an incident, continue operations during the event, and not stop growth after the incident is the definition of an organization with a vision! …
The first edition of ISO 22301 was launched in May 2012. It was the first truly internationally accepted standard on business continuity, and it consists of requirements to implement a Business Continuity Management System according to ISO Annex SL. As such, it stood in line with its prominent predecessors such…
Since the beginning of my business career, I have had the privilege to deal with customers from all corners of the world. Be it at a training center in Colorado Springs, a construction site for a swimming pool championship in Madrid, giving a presentation in Taipei, fixing a measurement problem…
Why care for something like organizational resilience? We’ve got a lot of management and corporate governance tools; we’ve got a dozen or so ISO system management standards; and on top of that, there are a lot of frameworks at our disposal, helping us to better manage an organization. One might…
The Swedish economy is accelerated from Small and Medium Enterprises (SME’s), overpassing the establishment of large organizations substantially. According to statistics, 1.082.100 out of 1.088.310 companies are small. In other words, 99,43% of enterprises in Sweden are SMEs. Typically, small companies have 1-49 employees, whereby most of them are sole…