Capital One Offers Disaster Planning Guidelines for Small Business Owners

As hurricane season begins, Capital One Financial Corporation released disaster-planning guidelines and a checklist to help small businesses prepare for emergency situations.

The checklist provides details to help small businesses:

  • Develop a continuity plan that addresses post-disaster recovery procedures;
  • Consider alternative operational locations;
  • Equip backup operations sites with critical equipment, data files and supplies;
  • Safeguard property;
  • Gather current contact information for employees, vendors and customers;
  • Develop multiple and reliable communication methods to reach employees;
  • Communicate details of the plan to employees;
  • Let customers and vendors know the business' plan and what to expect from the business;
  • Develop a detailed action plan in the event of a mandatory evacuation; and
  • Prepare for emergency cash management to handle cash flow.

    "It is important that small business owners take the necessary precautions to allow business continuity in the event of an emergency situation," said Dave Wasik, senior vice president of Small Business at Capital One. "Business owners should address primary concerns including meeting payroll obligations, paying bills, restoring critical technology and communicating with employees, customers and suppliers."

    The Capital One Small Business Web site also contains additional information and business tips to help them operate more effectively and efficiently. Direct deposit, online bill pay and corporate credit cards are just a few of the tools that businesses can explore.

    Capital One also offers the following planning recommendations to help businesses plan and prepare for potential emergencies:

    • Transport physical records when a business evacuates. Records should always be kept where they can be removed quickly and easily to a safe location.
    • Conduct a disaster-plan-building exercise with key employees.
    • Identify which aspects of operations can be suspended temporarily and which must be maintained. List the business tools they will need to perform operations essential to sustaining business during a disaster and the recovery period that follows.
    • Review communications capabilities for maintaining contact with employees. E-mail and text messaging should play a large role in employee communications planning.
    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.

Featured

  • AI Is Now the Leading Cybersecurity Concern for Security, IT Leaders

    Arctic Wolf recently published findings from its State of Cybersecurity: 2025 Trends Report, offering insights from a global survey of more than 1,200 senior IT and cybersecurity decision-makers across 15 countries. Conducted by Sapio Research, the report captures the realities, risks, and readiness strategies shaping the modern security landscape. Read Now

  • Analysis of AI Tools Shows 85 Percent Have Been Breached

    AI tools are becoming essential to modern work, but their fast, unmonitored adoption is creating a new kind of security risk. Recent surveys reveal a clear trend – employees are rapidly adopting consumer-facing AI tools without employer approval, IT oversight, or any clear security policies. According to Cybernews Business Digital Index, nearly 90% of analyzed AI tools have been exposed to data breaches, putting businesses at severe risk. Read Now

  • Software Vulnerabilities Surged 61 Percent in 2024, According to New Report

    Action1, a provider of autonomous endpoint management (AEM) solutions, today released its 2025 Software Vulnerability Ratings Report, revealing a 61% year-over-year surge in discovered software vulnerabilities and a 96% spike in exploited vulnerabilities throughout 2024, amid an increasingly aggressive threat landscape. Read Now

  • Motorola Solutions Named Official Safety Technology Supplier of the Ryder Cup through 2027

    Motorola Solutions has today been named the Official Safety Technology Supplier of the 2025 and 2027 Ryder Cup, professional golf’s renowned biennial team competition between the United States and Europe. Read Now

  • Evolving Cybersecurity Strategies

    Organizations are increasingly turning their attention to human-focused security approaches, as two out of three (68%) cybersecurity incidents involve people. Threat actors are shifting from targeting networks and systems to hacking humans via social engineering methods, living off human errors as their most prevalent attack vector. Whether manipulated or not, human cyber behavior is leveraged to gain backdoor access into systems. This mainly results from a lack of employee training and awareness about evolving attack techniques employed by malign actors. Read Now

New Products

  • Luma x20

    Luma x20

    Snap One has announced its popular Luma x20 family of surveillance products now offers even greater security and privacy for home and business owners across the globe by giving them full control over integrators’ system access to view live and recorded video. According to Snap One Product Manager Derek Webb, the new “customer handoff” feature provides enhanced user control after initial installation, allowing the owners to have total privacy while also making it easy to reinstate integrator access when maintenance or assistance is required. This new feature is now available to all Luma x20 users globally. “The Luma x20 family of surveillance solutions provides excellent image and audio capture, and with the new customer handoff feature, it now offers absolute privacy for camera feeds and recordings,” Webb said. “With notifications and integrator access controlled through the powerful OvrC remote system management platform, it’s easy for integrators to give their clients full control of their footage and then to get temporary access from the client for any troubleshooting needs.”

  • QCS7230 System-on-Chip (SoC)

    QCS7230 System-on-Chip (SoC)

    The latest Qualcomm® Vision Intelligence Platform offers next-generation smart camera IoT solutions to improve safety and security across enterprises, cities and spaces. The Vision Intelligence Platform was expanded in March 2022 with the introduction of the QCS7230 System-on-Chip (SoC), which delivers superior artificial intelligence (AI) inferencing at the edge.

  • PE80 Series

    PE80 Series by SARGENT / ED4000/PED5000 Series by Corbin Russwin

    ASSA ABLOY, a global leader in access solutions, has announced the launch of two next generation exit devices from long-standing leaders in the premium exit device market: the PE80 Series by SARGENT and the PED4000/PED5000 Series by Corbin Russwin. These new exit devices boast industry-first features that are specifically designed to provide enhanced safety, security and convenience, setting new standards for exit solutions. The SARGENT PE80 and Corbin Russwin PED4000/PED5000 Series exit devices are engineered to meet the ever-evolving needs of modern buildings. Featuring the high strength, security and durability that ASSA ABLOY is known for, the new exit devices deliver several innovative, industry-first features in addition to elegant design finishes for every opening.