Managing Risk During a Pandemic

5 Tips for Conducting Better Risk Assessments for a Pandemic

Graphic of two people Looking at charts and graphs representing a risk assessment

In earlier sections, we discussed the need for a risk-based approach and outlined 6 New Business Risks to consider when preparing your business for coronavirus. The Covid-19 pandemic and recession will affect every business, but to what extent will vary based on industry, geography, company size and a myriad of other factors. By creating a pandemic response plan, businesses can reduce the negative impacts of this virus and future outbreaks and manage your risk exposure during this pandemic.

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE 7 STEP PLAN

Coronavirus Business Preparation Examples

The initiatives your business puts together in response to the coronavirus outbreak will be, likely, wide ranging, depending on your unique business needs. For example, these steps might include activities like shifting budgeting from fixed spending to variable spending to provide flexibility in times of uncertainty. Additional pandemic response measures should include investments to enable working from home, guidelines for provisioning of personal protective equipment, and changes to workforce regulations. Shifting advertising spending towards digital channels and ecommerce sales can help lessen the financial impact of stay at home orders, or a loss of in-person traffic; but be sure to test these systems and workflows for high volume traffic.

Organizations may also supplement their product offering and business model by introducing new products and services better aligned with shifting economic forecasts.

Next Steps

Below are some the most important steps a business can take when planning their pandemic risk management strategy.

5 Pandemic Response Strategies You Can’t Afford to Ignore

Tip 1: Conduct Regular Threat Assessments

A readiness evaluation is a terrific place to start when businesses don’t understand what their business continuity program should comprise. Industry and role readiness templates and pandemic-specific templates let an employer test their business continuity program versus best practice to help identify any gaps that may exist. These readiness templates compress requirements and high-quality practices into actionable pieces so that companies can measure progress and compliance.

Tip 2: Update Risk Assessment Plan

All groups should conduct a risk assessment on their core business procedures to uncover and prioritize any new risks or gaps in their current controls. You should update these assessments to include new risks like pandemics, recession and geopolitical conditions. When conducting risk assessments for coronavirus stakeholders should be presented with the known risks and work together to determine how each of these eventualities will affect their areas of responsibility.

Tip 3: Conduct a Business Impact Analysis (BIA)

An organization should not handle all threats the same. A business impact analysis enables companies to anticipate which parts of the enterprise are essential to its operations. Use the outcomes of the BIA to determine which elements of the business to prioritize in a Continuity Plan.

Tip 4: Policy Management

As the pandemic evolves and new data becomes available, be sure to revisit, update and communicate new guidelines and processes throughout the organization. For example, revising a work from home policy might only be useful if the infrastructure and processes for dissemination, governance and adoption already exist.

Tip 5: Integrate Incident Management

Incident management is, often by design, an incredibly siloed activity embedded inside another process. In times of economic turmoil, a unified company-wide approach is necessary as an input to assess the effectiveness of mitigation and coverage activities and to help manage expectations.

In Summary

If you took a survey of business owners, even 6 months ago, it would be clear that pandemic response planning was not a priority. Prior to 2020 no one had ever done risk assessments for coronavirus. Businesses must be vigilant to not only current threats but future and emerging trends. Many business owners struggle to fully grasp the myriad risks they face. That’s why we’ve built a framework that teaches businesses how to anticipate and navigate risk before it becomes a crisis.

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE 7 STEP PLAN

Posted by:

Sign up!

For industry-leading guides and analysis sign up for our blog below.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Latest News

An engineer and the safety team walking a construction site discussing risk awareness

How to Foster a Culture of Risk Awareness and Responsibility

By Chesley Brown | July 18, 2023

In a world where new threats seem to emerge every single day, how can businesses protect themselves from the next danger hiding around the corner?  Technology can help. So can guidance from trained security experts.…

Read More
Two young professionals working on Organizational Resilience

Organizational Resilience: How Companies Can Navigate Security Threats — and Even Grow Stronger as a Result

By Chesley Brown | June 7, 2023

It’s impossible to prepare for every single security threat facing your business. You can identify all the potential dangers that you’ve seen before —- petty crime, fire, natural disaster, fraud — and build detailed, fully…

Read More
Woman unlocking a door with a key card - The best Business Security Systems for Property Managers

Secure Your Business: The Top Business Security Systems for Property Managers

By Chesley Brown | May 24, 2023

As a property manager, you are responsible for the security of your business premises and the assets that are within it. With criminal activities on the rise, ensuring maximum safety for your property is crucial…

Read More
businessman man handing a tenant keys to their new property. How Security Can Help Property Managers Combat High Tenant Vacancy Rates.

How Security Can Help Property Managers Combat High Tenant Vacancy Rates

By Chesley Brown | May 17, 2023

Across the country, office occupancy rates are the worst they’ve been in years. According to Cushman & Wakefield, national vacancy rates rose to 18.6% during the first quarter of 2023 — similar to what was seen during the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Read More

Natural Disaster Preparation: 6 Keys for Safeguarding Your Company from Hurricanes, Storms, Fires and Other Emergencies

By Chesley Brown | October 24, 2022

The question isn’t if your business will face a natural disaster. It’s when.  Over the past 50 years, the world has seen a five-fold increase in weather-related disasters, according to the United Nations.  And the…

Read More
The 7 Step Guide for Building Business Continuity Plans that Work