Business Continuity Planning

Business Continuity Planning helps organizations prepare for the moments when operations are disrupted by cyber incidents, outages, vendor failure, or a major technology problem. CyberDuo helps businesses define what must stay running, what can be restored later, who makes key decisions, and how the company will continue serving clients while recovery is underway.

For regulated industries, continuity planning is about resilience, not theory. Backups are important, but they are only one part of the picture. A real plan also looks at people, communications, dependencies, cloud services, remote work, and the sequence in which recovery should happen if multiple systems are affected at once.

Business Continuity Planning

What This Service Covers

Identification of critical processes, systems, dependencies, and recovery priorities
Planning for how the business operates during outages, cyber events, or major disruption
Alignment between backup, disaster recovery, cloud systems, and business operations
Defined roles, escalation paths, and leadership decision points during incidents
Support for testing, tabletop exercises, and continuity improvement over time

Why It Matters

Continuity planning reduces confusion when pressure is highest. It helps leadership act faster, communicate more clearly, and keep the business moving even when systems are impaired or unavailable.

Best Fit For

You want more than backups and need a real plan for operational disruption
Your organization depends on cloud tools, remote work, and critical shared systems
You need a more defensible resilience strategy for leadership, clients, or auditors

Frequently Asked Questions

How is business continuity different from disaster recovery?

Disaster recovery focuses more on restoring technology. Business continuity is broader and addresses how the organization keeps operating while technology is being restored.

Do you run tabletop exercises too?

Continuity planning is stronger when it is tested. Tabletop exercises help leadership and IT validate whether the plan is realistic before a real event happens.

Is continuity planning still important if we already use cloud platforms?

Yes. Cloud services reduce some risks, but they do not eliminate the need to plan for outages, compromised accounts, vendor issues, or major operational disruption.