Is Your Business Prepared For A Disaster?
Is Your Business Prepared For A Disaster?
(ARA) - When
it comes to disaster readiness, can you ever be too prepared?
According the Association of Small Business Development Centers,
the effects of a disaster can be quite profound: More than one in
four businesses will experience a significant crisis in a given
year, and of those businesses that experience a disaster and have
no emergency plan, 43 percent never reopen.
Is your small business vulnerable? A new national survey of 2,500
small businesses conducted by TNS NFO for Office Depot found:
* Three-quarters (71 percent) of small business owners do not have
a disaster preparedness plan, and;
* While 52 percent claim to burn important files on a removable
media device in order to keep data secure, only 11 percent keep
copies at an off-site location.
"Not having a plan or back-up system in place can result in a
business closing for good," says Tom Serio, director, global
business continuity management for Office Depot. "Just as you would
prepare your home and family for a potential disaster, it's
important that you also ready your business. There are simple and
affordable solutions that will help protect you, your employees and
your business."
Having weathered four major hurricanes in 2005 at the company's
corporate headquarters and its Gulf Coast store locations, Office
Depot is using its real world experience to educate small
businesses about disaster preparation. The Company is offering a
free brochure entitled Expecting the Unexpected: Disaster
Preparedness Strategies for Small Business, which provides tips and
product recommendations.
According to Serio, the key to effective planning is to protect
your most valuable assets: your people and your data. He recommends
following these tips:
* Build Solid Contact Lists: Keep contact information for
employees, local emergency services, and key vendor and supplier
information updated and easily accessible. Establish a clear
process for communicating with one another.
* Back-Up Data: Protect your business from faltering after a
disaster by backing-up key data at least once a week. Copy data to
removable media, including CD-R and DVD-R discs, or to removable
drives such as an Ativa Flash Drive.
* Secure Your Data: Move back-up software to a secure off-site
location. Store copies and documents you use in day-to-day
operations in a secure and fire-proof location. Periodically review
stored data to ensure that the correct data is being copied and
that it can be restored.
* Organize Supplies: Make sure you have the right supplies to
withstand any interruption. This includes having access to
important business tools like a laptop computer and car charger as
well as the basic office supplies needed to run your business.
"You've worked hard to build your business. Don't leave its future
to chance," adds Serio.
For the complete brochure visit,
www.officedepot.com/getprepared.
Courtesy of ARAcontent
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