great plan; but will they follow it in an incident? improving resilience
TRANSCRIPT
Great Plan; but will they follow it in an incident?
Improving Resilience
Who is this?
• Optimist: “Lucky”• Pessimist: “Unlucky”• BC Manager: “The trains were working?”
Answer:Tsutomu Yamaguchi
Will they follow the plan?
• ‘Planning’ vs. ‘The Plan’ vs. Incident Readiness• Participation• Engagement• Plan Access and Plan Format• Exercising• Incident Systems
Participation: Attendance
~ 40 % of people turn up• Plan for it!• Cross-training is only partially effective– Remote– Resources, access / authority, vital records– Volumes– Supervision, exception management
• Work rotation might be better
Participation: Capability
• 50% of people are below average!– “About 10% to 15% remain calm and act quickly and efficiently. Another 15% or less completely freak out--weeping, screaming or otherwise hindering the evacuation... The vast majority of people do very little. They are ‘stunned and bewildered’.” Psychologist John Leach in a 2004 article published in Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine.’ (Ripley, 2005: 60)
• Incident response team members– Selection and training
• Heroes don’t exist• Exercise, exercise, exercise...
Engagement
• Don’t separate Planning from the business who will need to be involved
• Very simple planning tools: • Must be lowest path of resistance
• Compare with the ownership of SOx attestation• Who will take charge in an incident, not whom
they appoint in peacetime• Can we establish real ‘ownership’?
Plan Access and Plan Format
• It better be mobile! It’s 2015 for goodness sake.
• Plan Format– Less is more– Distil down to simple checklists:
Plan Access and Plan Format
• Everything can be a checklist– Less is more– Not too prescriptive• A few essential points, plus general considerations only• Better to be approximately right, than precisely wrong!
Exercising
• Not just a compliance requirement!• The best learning tool• Observation and Analysis– Not Pass vs. Fail– Create corrective action plan
• Only works if the plan is ‘exercisable’• Learning for non-time-critical roles too
Incident Management Systems
• The battle plan doesn’t survive contact with the enemy
• Not a NASA command center– 50% people are below average. Add to that the
impediments of disabilities, language, pressure• Leverage your planning efforts– Provided they are simple!
• No new moves
Conclusion:
• Don’t plan to plan• Low attendance and capability– More cross-training / role rotation
• Engagement -> Ownership• Everything can be a checklist• Better to be approx right that precisely wrong• 50% of people are below average (+ impediments)• Exercise more realistically, and involve the non-
time-critical roles• I.M. : no new moves
Questions?
Roland JohnsonPhone: (917) 583-0286 [email protected] www.clearview-continuity.com