| BUSINESS DISASTER PLANNING CHECKLIST |
| Planning Before a Hurricane or Other Disaster Arrives is Key to Business Survival.These guidelines help businesses develop a strategy to minimize damage and lost time.Develop a business continuity / disaster recovery plan. |
| • Establish a disaster-recovery team of employees who know your business best, and assign responsibilities for specific tasks. |
| • Identify your risks (kinds of disasters you're most likely to experience). |
| • Prioritize critical business functions and how quickly these must be recovered. |
| • Establish a disaster-recovery location where employees may work |
| off-site and access critical back-up systems, records and supplies. |
| • Obtain temporary housing for key employees, their families and pets. |
| • Update and test your plan at least annually. |
| Alternative operational locations. Determine which alternatives are available: |
| • A satellite or branch office of your business. |
| • The office of a business partner or even an employee. |
| • Home or hotel. |
| Backup site. Equip your backup operations site with critical equipment, data files and supplies: |
| • Power generators. |
| • Computers and software. |
| • Critical computer data files (payroll, accounts payable and receivable, customer orders, inventory). |
| • Phones/radios/TVs. |
| • Equipment and spare parts. |
| • Vehicles, boats and spare parts. |
| • Digital cameras. |
| • Common supplies. |
| • Supplies unique to your business (order forms, contracts, etc.). |
| • Basic first aid/sanitary supplies, potable water and food. |
| Safeguard your property. Is your property prepared to survive a hurricane or other disaster: |
| • Your building? |
| • Your equipment? |
| • Your computer systems? |
| • Your company vehicles? |
| • Your company records? |
| • Other company assets? |
| Contact information. Do you have current and multiple contact information (e.g., home and cell phone numbers, personal email addresses) for: |
| • Employees? |
| • Key customers? |
| • Important vendors, suppliers, business partners? |
| • Insurance companies? |
| • Is contact information accessible electronically for fast access by all employees? |
| Communications. Do you have access to multiple and reliable methods of communicating with your employees: |
| • Emergency toll-free hotline? |
| • Web site? |
| • Cell phones? |
| • Satellite phones? |
| • Pagers? |
| • BlackBerryTM? |
| • Two-way radios? |
| • Internet? |
| • Email? |
| Employee preparation. Make sure your employees know: |
| • Company emergency plan |
| • Where they should relocate to work |
| • How to use and have access to reliable methods of communication, such as satellite/cell phones, email, voice mail, Internet, text messages, BlackBerryTM, PDAs |
| • How they will be notified to return to work |
| • Benefits of direct deposit of payroll and subscribe to direct deposit |
| • Emergency company housing options available for them and their family |
| Customer preparation. Make sure your key customers know: |
| • Your emergency contact information for sales and service support (publish on your Web site). |
| • Your backup business or store locations (publish on your Web site). |
| • What to expect from your company in the event of a prolonged disaster displacement |
| • Alternate methods for placing orders. |
| • Alternate methods for sending invoice payments in the event of mail disruption |
| Evacuation order. When a mandatory evacuation is issued, be prepared to grab and leave with critical office records and equipment: |
| • Company disaster-recovery plan and checklist. |
| • Insurance policies and company contracts |
| • Company checks, plus a list of all bank accounts, credit cards, ATM cards. |
| • Employee payroll and contact information |
| • Desktop/laptop computers |
| • Customer records, including orders in progress. |
| • Photographs/digital images of your business property. |
| • Post disaster contact info inside your business to alert emergency workers how to reach you. |
| • Secure your building and property. |
| Cash management. Be prepared to meet emergency cash-flow needs: |
| • Take your checkbook and credit cards in the event of an evacuation. |
| • Keep enough cash on hand to handle immediate needs. |
| • Use Internet banking services to monitor account activity, manage cash flow, initiate wires, pay bills. |
| • Issue corporate cards to essential personnel to cover emergency business expenses. |
| • Reduce dependency on paper checks and postal service to send and receive payments (consider using electronic payment and remote deposit banking services). |
| Post-disaster recovery procedures. |
| • Consider how your post-disaster business may differ from today. |
| • Plan whom you will want to contact and when. |
| • Assign specific tasks to responsible employees. |
| • Track progress and effectiveness. |
| • Document lessons learned and best practices. |