Posted:
29 December 2011 at
1:07 pm (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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Everybody’s other favourite pastime: comparing salaries! The deadline is 31 December 2011 for recruiter BC Management’s Asia BCM compensation study. Click here to complete the survey. Results for 2010: 27% of BCM people in Asia get SGD 50K or less per year, 23% get up to SGD 100K and another 23% get up to SGD150K. 75% of the SGD 50K or less were in India. View the chart for Asia Pacific. Hey, you do this for love, not money, right? When you complete the Asia BCM compensation study, you get a free copy. Pass it on to your HR department.
Posted:
28 December 2011 at
1:08 pm (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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Everybody’s favourite pastime: comparing themselves with others! Complete the KPMG-Continuity Insights BCM Program Benchmarking survey and maybe win this Amazon Kindle Fire.
They say it takes twenty (20) minutes to complete; the deadline is 15 January 2012. To hear how your BCM program compares to everyone else’s, register for the Continuity Insights conference in Scottsdale, Arizona (USA) in April 2012. Or just read the May 2012 issue of Continuity Insights magazine. Here are the 2007 KPMG-CI Benchmarking Survey results, for comparison.
Posted:
5 December 2011 at
1:35 pm (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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Published in the Singapore Business Review, 5 December 2011 http://bit.ly/vIPCg0
I believe Singapore will eventually experience a severe earthquake. I’m not a pessimist; I’m a realist. You can’t live 400 hundred kilometers from a major earthquake fault and say there is no risk of earthquake.
The kitchen drawers in my 23rd floor Singapore home rolled open by themselves in the “tremor” from Sumatra in February 2008. That was a 7.0 magnitude earthquake. What happens after one that’s 8.0? Or 9.0, like Fukushima?
You understand that 9.0 is one hundred times stronger than 7.0, right?
As an organizational resilience professional, I imagine these consequences in Singapore:
• Civil Defense focused on high-priority locations. Ambulances simply unavailable
• Damaged office towers too risky to re-enter, and BCA inspectors overwhelmed
• Hundreds of employees and customers injured by falling glass
• Broken telecom lines and jammed mobile circuits
• Collapsed or buried segments of MRT track, and impassable road surfaces
• Damaged water, sewer and electric power lines
• Thousands of people trying to acquire drinking water
• Toilets that flush once but don’t refill
• Panic cash withdrawals from ATMs, only some of which will be functioning Read more... (673 words, 1 image, estimated 2:42 mins reading time)
Posted:
15 August 2011 at
10:12 am (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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So this is what passes for thought leadership in business continuity management (BCM) these days.
The Business Continuity Institute (BCI), a U.K. professional association with global ambitions and under-exploited footholds in the growth markets of Asia, Middle East and South America, goes looking for a partner in North America. After thoughtful deliberation about the future of BCM in the 21st century, and with all the time in the world to make a choice, they select…the Disaster Recovery Journal (DRJ), a 24-year old, American, family-owned magazine publisher and conference producer that must be the only BCM business in the world still calling it “disaster recovery,” the most-resented term in BCM profession.
BCI’s announcement says the alliance “aims to align thought leadership between [the] two organizations,” while DRJ’s press release says the alliance will “broaden and deepen discussions in…business continuity and related professions.”
That “thought leadership” bit caught my eye. When I first skimmed the headline, I mistakenly thought the BCI and the American professional association formerly-known-as the Disaster Recovery Institute International – DRII – had finally decided to stop pissing on each other’s shoes. Now, that would be news. Read more... (2676 words, 2 images, estimated 10:42 mins reading time)
Posted:
3 August 2011 at
5:14 pm (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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- In 2010, 80% of the students who had Nathaniel as their instructor passed the exam on their first try. To help you pass, too, Nathaniel offers a ‘No One Left Behind’ Guarantee. Watch the video to hear his guarantee.
- Nathaniel packs the course with photos and case studies from his 15 years of BCM experience in Asia. You get ‘real world’ examples and sample documents you can use right away, plus the BCI’s universally-recognized theory that helps you pass the exam.
- Nathaniel teaches the course in only three (3) days instead of the usual five (5) days, saving you time and money.
- No other BCM certificate has the global stature and recognition of The BCI’s ABCI/CBCI/MBCI/FBCI certification hierarchy. Read what Nathaniel has written about ‘sub-prime’ BCM certifications.
- You get Nathaniel as your instructor, an American with 15 years of on-the-ground BCM experience in Asia, not an inexperienced substitute teacher. Read some of the testimonials from his past students about Nathaniel.
It’s easy to register. Contact Chris Tan at chris.tan@calamity.com.sg, send an SMS text message to +65 9688-5000, or call +65 6324-3091 during business hours in Singapore.
Plus 5 MORE good reasons to take this course in Singapore, Tropical Paradise of Southeast Asia! Read more... (410 words, 2 images, estimated 1:38 mins reading time)
Posted:
27 September 2006 at
4:38 pm (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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Thailand’s Foreign Bankers’ Association offers this English version of the Bank of Thailand (BoT) July 2006 Circular 896-2549 proposing guidelines for BCM. The guidelines will apply to all commercial banks, which will have one year to comply. That will probably put the compliance target date in 4Q 2007. To track BoT bulletins on all subjects, bookmark this link.
Posted:
24 August 2006 at
12:55 pm (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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Singapore is preparing for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank Group meeting in September, locally referred to as “S2006“. 16,000 visitors are expected; lots of companies plan to active their BCP‘s for the event. Public demonstrations are banned in Singapore, but there’s been plenty of preparation for disruptions. Here’s how to handle a phone threat, and this is what to do with a suspicious package.
Posted:
14 August 2006 at
2:57 pm (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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PT Mitra Solusi Telematika has a commercial disaster recovery centre in Jakarta, Indonesia. They are a subsidiary of PT Trakindo Utama, heavy equipment manufacturer Caterpillar‘s authorized dealer in Indonesia. It’s certainly handy that Caterpillar makes generators and UPS. Bagus! Click here for a Bahasa Indonesia dictionary.
Posted:
24 June 2006 at
11:04 am (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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Our colleagues at Juken Consultancy in Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia) spent last month trying to find any BCP regulations in Malaysia. The conclusion? Tidak apa. There are no BCP requirements in Malaysia – not from Bank Negara (the Central Bank), not from the Securities Commission, not for banks in Malaysia. There are “guidelines” (and suggestions, advice and encouragement) but no rules. Please, tell us we’re wrong.
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