Business continuity planning is the difference between a company that survives a crisis and one that never reopens its doors — and right now, most businesses are dangerously unprepared. In August 2017, Hurricane Harvey hit Houston. Businesses flooded. Power went out. Roads closed for weeks. Some companies were back online within 48 hours. Others never came back at all. The difference wasn't luck. It wasn't size. It was whether anyone had sat down beforehand and asked: "What happens if everything stops?" According to FEMA, one in four businesses never reopens after a major disaster. Among those without a continuity plan, 75% fail within three years. And 90% of small businesses close permanently after just five days of downtime. These aren't edge cases. They're what happens when disruption meets unpreparedness. That's what business continuity is about. Not paranoia. Not bureaucracy. The practical, structured skill of keeping an organization runnin...
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