Downtime with a Dynamic Recovery Strategy
Dan Perrin, Solutions Director, Workplace Recovery, Regus
Dan Perrin, Solutions Director, Workplace Recovery, Regus
If recent history is a gauge it would appear there are a growing number of extreme natural disasters wreaking havoc on the global economy. In a report prepared by London-based global reinsurance firm Aon Benfield, Hurricane Sandy resulted in 65 billion dollar in economic losses. Look to the earthquake and tsunami in Japan as a proof point of how a disaster can impact the delicate global supply chain. Each year the Philippines are impacted by 20 plus typhoons.
According to the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety, approximately 25 percent of small businesses fail to reopen after a major disaster. Consider that Hurricane Sandy affected more than one million businesses; it is plausible thousands of companies did not re-open. Having a dynamic recovery strategy could have made the difference in keeping a business afloat or having it fall victim to that historic storm.