Crisis Management

In good times, you can simply argue you have a Business Continuity Plan (BCP) but in case of a crisis, you have to prove it works. ebrc crisis management program and governance will help you make the difference between a business-as-usual or disaster situation.

ebrc experts help you implement a plan allowing you to deal with a crisis situation, thus transforming your company into an agile organisation capable of evolving swiftly and cost-effectively in any circumstances by catching market opportunities and facing business disruption.

An effective crisis management occurs when potential crises are detected and dealt with quickly before they can impact the organisation’s stability.

It involves:

  • Identification of vital functions and processes that are critical to the business
  • Design of the operational plans to deal with potential issues
  • Identification of the crisis response team and their respective roles & responsibilities
  • Definition of the crisis communication strategy
  • Measurement of crisis management efficiency by regular testing and reporting of the plan
  • Crisis management documentation

Supported by a crisis management plan, your organisation will develop a real competitive advantage ensuring you:

  • To get the crisis under control as quickly as possible to minimise the damage.
  • To protect the company reputation
  • To reinforce the reliability of the shareholders
  • To assure stability and confidence for your employees
  • To improve business processes and cost-efficiency
  • To make smart decisions

By applying standards especially BS 25999, DRII and ISO27000 and covering the whole BCM lifecycle, our experts give you confidence in business-to-business and business-to-customer dealings.

ebrc achieves the ISO 27001 certification, that comprehensively defines the requirements for establishing, implementing and documenting an effective information Security Management System.

ebrc builds relevant Business Continuity Plans in compliance with legal constraints:

  • International regulations such as Basel II or MIFID, for the financial institutions;
  • Recommendations from the Luxembourg public institution “Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier” (CSSF) on data confidentiality and integrity

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