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How Does Your Company Measure Up?
The Business Continuity Management (BCM) Maturity Model

By Scott Ream


When requesting budget to improve your business continuity plan, when a client seeks reassurance that your company will be able to continue to meet it's needs, when a financial partner needs to know that your company is prepared for possible business disruptions, a "yardstick" by which to measure your level of preparedness could prove invaluable.

Business continuity has evolved over the last 40+ years. The Business Continuity Institute and Disaster Recovery Institute have published Professional Practice Standards to define and certify Business Continuity Professionals. What the industry lacks is a method by which an organization's Business Continuity Program can be measured.

In January of 2002, the concept of a Business Continuity Management Maturity Model was advanced in the CPM article, "How Mature is your Business Continuity Program?". In this article a 6-level model, summarized below, was defined to describe how organizations evolve in their implementation of business continuity competency and capability.

Level 1 - Self-Governed - Business continuity management has not yet been recognized as strategically important by senior management.

Level 2 - Supported Self-Governed - At least one business unit or corporate function has recognized the strategic importance of business continuity and has begun efforts to increase executive and enterprise-wide awareness.

Level 3 - Centrally-Governed - Participating business units and departments have instituted a rudimentary governance program, mandating at least limited compliance to standardized BCM policy, practices and processes to which they have commonly agreed.

Level 4 - Enterprise Awakening - All critical business functions have been identified and continuity plans for their protection have been developed across the enterprise.

Level 5 - Planned Growth - Business continuity plans and tests incorporate multi-departmental considerations of critical enterprise business processes.

Level 6 - Synergistic - All business units have a measurably high degree of business continuity planning competency. Complex business protection strategies are formulated and tested successfully.

Note: As with any business process, if the supporting infrastructure is removed or significantly diminished, the effectiveness of the BCM Program will deteriorate and with it the company's state-of-preparedness. Therefore a company can move up or down as changes dictate.

Also in the January, 2002 CPM article a project was proposed to map the BCM Maturity Model Levels to the 10 Subject Areas of the combined DRI / BCI Professional Practices standard. A Working Team was formed as the instrument through which cross-industry experience, consultation and advice could be harvested. In April, 2002 the Working Team, with volunteers and recruits, had its first meeting.

Early in the mapping exercise the Working Team recognized that the BCM Maturity Model needed a rigorous method for measuring the performance Level achieved by an organization. The notion of "Corporate Competencies" was considered. Each Corporate Competency would categorize a critical attribute of an organization's ability to create a sustainable business continuity program. In this manner, we saw that we could create an "Organizational View" of the BCI / DRI Professional Practices standard. In essence, we saw the following:

Just as the BCI / DRI Professional Practices standard defines a framework for measuring business continuity skill and performance of an individual, the Corporate Competencies provide a framework for measuring business continuity skill and performance of an organization.

The following Corporate Competencies were defined:

Leadership - The commitment and understanding demonstrated by executive management regarding the implementation of a scaled, enterprise-wide business continuity program. As well, the degree to which the "business case" for implementing sustainable business continuity has been articulated to and understood by executive management.

BC Awareness - The breadth and depth of business continuity conceptual awareness throughout all staff levels of the organization including consideration for the quality and sustainability of the BC training and awareness program.

BC Program Structure - The scale and appropriateness of the business continuity program implemented across the enterprise. The degree to which the BCM Program matches the articulated "business case".

Program Pervasiveness - The level of business continuity coordination between departments, functions and business units. The degree to which business continuity considerations have been incorporated in other business initiatives/programs.

Metrics - The development and monitoring of BCM Program performance. The establishment and tracking of a business continuity competency baseline.

Resource Commitment - The application of sufficient, properly trained and supported personnel, financial and other resources to ensure the sustainability of the BCM Program.

External Coordination - Coordination of business continuity issues and requirements with external community including customers, vendors, government, unions, banks, etc. Insuring that critical supply chain partners have adequate BCM Programs of their own in place.

Having defined these competency categories, the Working Team is now engaged in fleshing the detailed definitions for how each of these Corporate Competencies is characterized at each Level of the BCM Maturity Model. A first cut has been taken which summarizes the "degree of engagement" of each Corporate Competency in terms of a "High", "Medium" and "Low" degree at each Level.

In addition to the work just described, the Team is developing organizational descriptors for each Level of the Model within the context of each of the ten Professional Practices Subject Areas. In this manner a matrix was born of the initial insights of the Working Team members. The work on this matrix continues in 2003. For the moment, this matrix has been labeled "Program Execution" and is being considered as the eighth Corporate Competency; however, the entries in this subordinate matrix may be realigned to fit within one or more of the other seven Corporate Competencies.

The work goes on …
Interested readers are invited to volunteer their time and expertise to assist with this useful project. There are a number of goals for this effort:

  • Development of a "public domain" BCM Maturity Model framework accessible to all BC practitioners and professionals. (To this end, a representative of the BCI has joined the Board and is participating in the Model's development).
  • Development of an assessment "toolkit" which can be utilized to objectively quantify where in the Model a particular organization is today, what gaps exist and what next steps should be taken to move the organization toward its next goal.

If you would like to assist with this on-going project, consider joining the BCM Maturity Model Working Team. Contact Margaret Langsett via email at Mlangsett@Virtual-Corp.net or via phone at (973) 927-5454. Meetings are generally held via conference call. The time commitment is minimal. Additional details on the Model can be found at www.virtual-corp.net/html/bc_model.html


About the Author
Mr. Scott Ream is President and founder of Virtual Corporation. He can be reached at (973) 927-5454 or via email at SReam@Virtual-Corp.net. The author wishes to thank the many members of the BCM Maturity Model Working Team without whom this work would not be achievable. BCM Maturity Model is a trademark of Virtual Corporation.

 
 
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