The landscape of business disruptions is evolving, with potential threats emerging from ransomware attacks, identity breaches, supplier failures, or extended cloud outages. These incidents can quickly escalate, impacting operations, customer access, compliance, and supplier relationships.
The Role of Cyber Resilience in Business Continuity
Cyber resilience is now integral to business continuity. Ensuring business operations can continue during disruptions requires a deep understanding of critical processes, information dependencies, supplier exposure, cloud reliance, and risk management. The ISF Standard of Good Practice (SOGP) 2026 highlights the importance of aligning business continuity strategies with governance, information risk, system resilience, security incident management, and testing.
Effective Governance in Continuity Planning
In the event of a security incident, prompt action across all functions is critical. Security teams must contain the threat, IT must restore systems, legal teams assess ramifications, and communications inform stakeholders. Decision rights, escalation paths, risk appetite, and recovery priorities are fundamental to effective governance, ensuring all teams are aligned and responsive.
Ensuring System Resilience
System resilience is crucial for business continuity. Backup processes, restoration timelines, SLAs, capacity planning, and change management must be viewed as business resilience issues. Continuity plans need to be practical, regularly tested, and adaptable to ensure systems can be restored within agreed timelines. Alternative solutions should be in place to prevent cascading failures from disrupting business operations.
Integrating incident response with business continuity is vital to navigating today’s complex threat landscape. When cyber incidents occur, organizations must be prepared to simultaneously manage containment, investigation, legal assessments, customer communication, operational adjustments, supplier coordination, and system recovery.
Importance of Supplier and Cloud Dependencies
The reliance on diverse supply chains, including cloud platforms, SaaS tools, and external partners, necessitates a focus on supplier and cloud dependencies within continuity plans. Contracts should clearly define expectations for resilience and security. Continuous monitoring and assessment ensure suppliers and cloud services meet these expectations, with recovery plans in place.
Testing for Realized Resilience
Regular testing of continuity plans against realistic scenarios is essential. This includes addressing potential disruptions from ransomware, cloud outages, supplier failures, identity breaches, and data integrity issues. Testing evaluates crisis management capabilities, technical infrastructure resilience, and the ability to resume critical operations within acceptable timeframes.
In conclusion, business continuity relies on robust cyber resilience and risk management. Organizations must have actionable plans that support operations when systems fail, data is compromised, and suppliers become bottlenecks, placing cyber resilience at the forefront of continuity planning.
