Business Continuity · ISO 22301

Business Continuity Management — Keeping your business running

We help companies prepare for crisis situations. From Business Impact Analysis to continuity plans and testing.

What is BCM?

Business Continuity Management is a systematic approach to maintaining business operations during crisis situations. BCM covers not just IT (that's DRP's role), but the entire organisation — business processes, personnel, communications, supply chains and client relationships.

BCM implementation process

1

Business Impact Analysis

We identify critical business processes and assess the impact of their disruption.

2

Continuity strategies

We design strategies for maintaining or rapidly restoring critical processes.

3

Continuity plans

We document BC plans for each critical process.

4

Crisis communication

We develop internal and external communication procedures for crisis situations.

5

Testing programme

Regular exercises and tests of continuity plans — from tabletop to full simulations.

ISO 22301 alignment

ISO 22301 is the international standard for business continuity management. We help implement a BCMS system aligned with ISO 22301 and prepare your company for certification.

FAQ — BCM

BCM is a broad approach to whole business continuity. DRP (Disaster Recovery Planning) is one BCM element, focused on IT system recovery. BCM also covers people, processes, communications and supply chains.
BIA analyses the impact of business process disruption on the company. It determines critical processes, maximum tolerable period of disruption (MTPD), resource requirements and inter-process dependencies.
Not directly for all companies, but regulations such as NIS2, DORA, KNF and ISO 27001 requirements contain business continuity elements. Many corporate clients require BCM from their suppliers.
Our packages start from 15,000 PLN net. The cost depends on the number of locations, critical processes and required maturity level.
At least once a year or after any significant organisational, technological or regulatory change. We recommend quarterly reviews and tests every 6 months.

Ready to talk?

Book a free 30-minute consultation

Book a consultation
Business Continuity Management — Keeping your business running | RedMoon