With recent high-profile headlines of outages and technology breaches affecting giant corporations, advisers must remember the importance of business continuity planning.
Here are a few best practices to ensure that you have a comprehensive business continuity plan:
Regulatory: Ensure your business continuity plan is in line with regulations, is tested at least annually, and is documented in your policies and procedures.
Business disruption: Identify potential business interruption issues such as power outages, technology disruption, weather events, etc. Put in place detailed procedures that are documented to provide an action plan in case of these occurrences.
Key person risk: Identify the key personnel in your business who directly impact the operations and have a detailed back up plan, cross-training and contingency plans in place in case that key person or team becomes unavailable.
Technology: Identify and document back up plans you have in place such as redundancy, security and ability to restore key operational technology in case of an outage or disruption. Understand passwords and encryption, the location of all laptops and mobile devices, and have a documented plan in place.
Executive ownership: Ensure that all senior management is aware, understands and is involved in all aspects of business continuity planning.
(Related read: How a cloud backup helped one adviser's disaster-recovery planning)
These are just a few approaches to ensure that you and your business are protected in case of potential issues that can have a serious impact on your business.
These high profile cases are also great examples of the importance of working with key partners who can support you in this process at the highest levels. How secure is your data? Engaging with your technology vendors and requesting – in writing – their security policy can help ensure your business is covered in case of outage or disaster.
Here is a checklist of questions to ask your vendors:
Data security: Where is your data stored? How is it transmitted, encrypted and monitored?
Availability management: Is the infrastructure fully redundant including HVAC, conditioned uninterrupted power, suppression systems, enterprise-class routing equipment?
Certifications: Does your vendor adhere to information security and related certification and standards?
Network monitoring and protection: Are there dedicated firewalls, advanced web application firewalls, and load balancers?
Physical and environmental security: Who has physical access to the servers where your data is hosted? What security measures are in place at those facilities?
(More: The biggest cyberthreat to advisory firms: Employees)
Assessing the security of your data helps protect you, your firm and your clients from unforeseen circumstances. Don't wait for disaster to strike – be proactive in establishing a business continuity plan and protocols to secure your data.
Gregory H. Friedman is co-founder and president of Junxure, and founder and president of Private Ocean.More from Greg Friedman: Why seamless technology integration isn't always so seamless