Esolution Consulting, a risk management consultancy, has organized a workshop on Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Management to ensure the achievement of business goals.
The workshop was to create awareness and the need for organizations, businesses and government to develop the capacity to continue critical business activities in the event of any disaster.
The Chief Executive of Esolution Consulting, Solomon Adiyiah, observed that, effective business continuity and disaster recovery must be informed by clear understanding of critical processes that must be conducted in order to achieve business goals and key supporting objectives.
He added that, to ensure that the processes are adequately protected, business continuity planners must have clear and comprehensive understanding of all critical business elements in an organization, including their relationships, inter-dependencies and relative priority to the businesses. “So risks can be identified, assessed and appropriately planned for,” he stressed.
Adiyiah cautioned that “incomplete business continuity analysis would leave the organization vulnerable to a critical failure.”
Topics treated at the workshop include understanding business continuity planning concepts, risk management, business impact analysis, business continuity strategy development, business continuity plan development, business continuity plan testing and maintenance.
The workshop brought together participants from the insurance industry, the banking industry, Bank of Ghana, Ghana Armed Forces, Volta River Authority and VAT services.
The workshop was to create awareness and the need for organizations, businesses and government to develop the capacity to continue critical business activities in the event of any disaster.
The Chief Executive of Esolution Consulting, Solomon Adiyiah, observed that, effective business continuity and disaster recovery must be informed by clear understanding of critical processes that must be conducted in order to achieve business goals and key supporting objectives.
He added that, to ensure that the processes are adequately protected, business continuity planners must have clear and comprehensive understanding of all critical business elements in an organization, including their relationships, inter-dependencies and relative priority to the businesses. “So risks can be identified, assessed and appropriately planned for,” he stressed.
Adiyiah cautioned that “incomplete business continuity analysis would leave the organization vulnerable to a critical failure.”
Topics treated at the workshop include understanding business continuity planning concepts, risk management, business impact analysis, business continuity strategy development, business continuity plan development, business continuity plan testing and maintenance.
The workshop brought together participants from the insurance industry, the banking industry, Bank of Ghana, Ghana Armed Forces, Volta River Authority and VAT services.
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