It is Friday again, and here is some suggestions for weekend reading that you may want to sample. For the second week in a row I am going to highlight a post from the IT Skeptic. This week, “Why IT Projects fail:underspend“. If you substitute in your mind “BC Project” for “IT Project” I suspect […]
… wanting your life back
Perhaps Tony Hayward (soon-to-be-former Group CEO at BP) had a valid point when he lamented the loss of his private life. Anybody who has been involved in a real crisis management role knows that it tends to absorb a lot of your time – most crises don’t stop for evenings and weekends. My current BAU […]
… resilience starts at home.
We all talk a lot about the importance of the “people” aspects for Business Continuity – and it is more significant to position this aspect correctly when looking at the concept of resilience. Too often it is just talk, not really backed by understanding and appropriate actions. Often we need direct involvement in a situation […]
… my first webcast (pt1)
Eventually! To make things more manageable, both for me to get a good recording, and for you to make viewing easier, I have split the Presentation into 2 webcasts. This is using Slideshare, and if you want to go there rather than use the embedded player, there is a link. As always, appreciate your questions […]
… heroic serendipity
ThingsĀ have been a little slow on the writing front since my last post about Tim Armit’s essay. I was a little disappointed that Tim’s original post generated so little discussion. I am the only person who commented at Continuity Central. I also posted about this on a LinkedIn Group (BCM Info Exchange), which generated 3 […]