Our resources are designed to support your continuity planning efforts and help you create a culture of resilience on your campus.
Use this FEMA tool to help evaluate your risk and estimate expected annual losses, social vulnerabilities, and community resilience.
Learn what you can do now to prepare for a more resilient 2021 and take away actionable steps to help you get started.
Disaster recovery plans are a key element of a mature business continuity program. Having them in place will ensure a more efficient recovery effort.
Kuali Ready amplifies continuity planning efforts at your institution by streamlining planning, engaging stakeholders, and providing one secure location for all continuity work. Learn more today.
Kuali Ready, the first and only higher ed continuity planning suite, is designed specifically for the needs and operations of higher ed. Learn how Kuali Ready can amplify your efforts.
This guide walks through features to consider in a continuity planning software solution that help simplify, streamline, and improve efficiency in your continuity planning efforts.
Learn how you can simplify continuity planning by reducing the time needed to train and support department leaders, and tour the only continuity planning software designed for higher ed.
This ebook discusses higher ed continuity planning to help you build a more robust continuity program at your institution.
Building a culture of resilience is essential in helping institutions of higher learning weather any storm.
Institutions of higher education are a business, a school, and a research facility all at once, so continuity planning is essential. Here are the main benefits.
A quick guide to get you started on developing your business continuity plan.
Learn more about business continuity planning and how it can help your institution prepare to keep critical functions available during disasters and adverse events.
Strengthening Institutional Resilience in the Midst of COVID-19
With COVID-19 looming, the 2020 hurricane season has more challenges and a new set of considerations. Learn how you can adequately prepare amidst COVID-19.
Make preparing home and office for hurricane season simpler with this checklist designed for higher ed department leaders.
This Higher Ed Continuity Planning Software Buying Guide will help streamline the software evaluation process for your institution.
From the start of hurricane season through after a storm has passed, this checklist is designed to help Emergency Managers and Continuity Planners in higher education.
Building a higher ed continuity program can be daunting. The Continuity Program Methodology for Higher Ed can help you build and improve your institution’s program.
This guide is designed to be used as a checklist of activities to consider in your preparation for moving staff, faculty, and students back to campus, and resuming campus activities under some level o
This higher ed continuity planning guide will walk you through the basics of a continuity plan so you can get started planning for your department or institution.
Adverse events, like the COVID-19 pandemic, put our best planning efforts to the test.
Working from home is an essential skill. We're giving you the tips and methods to make it work for you.
This pandemic planning support guide provides basic pandemic information, scope of an outbreak, why pandemic planning is important, and elements of a higher ed pandemic plan.
BCP can help you gain a thorough understanding of your organization and where it is potentially the most vulnerable.
Chris Floyd of Disaster Resilient Communities walks through an exercise in dealing with the numerous challenges associated with managing the consequences of a shooting incident occurring on campus.
We are proud to announce the first ever Kuali Ready track as part of Kuali Days 2020!
With a system that’s easy to implement and built around your business functions, Kuali Ready can help you create departmental plans that increase institutional resiliency.
Lauren Mink explains how she and her colleagues at East Carolina University have prepared for natural disasters, and how their thorough planning helped them weather the storm.
In this webinar, Stephen Morash, Director of Emergency Management at Boston University, shares his experience contributing to recovery efforts in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombings.
We will facilitate a panel discussion covering how vendor-institution collaboration results in better software solutions, improved user experience and ultimately, enhanced student experiences.
This 50-minute panel discussion features a question and answer portion with continuity planning and emergency management experts from Boise State University and Susquehanna University.
Join Missy Krewson, Program Manager for Preparedness and Security Initiatives at Arizona State University.
Join Megan Levy, ABCP, MIPM, and Business, Academic, and Research Continuity Manager at the University of Washington, as she shares a business continuity planning case study from her university
ECU searched for a readiness solution that would help the university to be the most prepared in the face of an emergency.
More than 70,000 students attend classes at one of Arizona State University’s campuses in the Phoenix area, and it had no business continuity plans in place.
With more than 34,000 students, 310 buildings, 2,326 laboratories, 134 acres, and 10,182 employees, Boston University needs to plan for every emergency, as well as what happens after.
The university’s emergency management team was interested in developing a business continuity plan, and so was its Chief Financial Officer.
The university had a homegrown business continuity planning system, but it wasn’t as automated as they would like or easy to use.
Touro College, which has multiple schools and campuses, had no business continuity plans in place.
The University of North Dakota had business continuity plans.
Understanding which functions at your institution are most critical is imperative to resuming operations following a disruption.
What would your institution do in the face of a natural disaster, an outbreak of a contagious virus, a terrorist attack or even a long-term power outage?
We look forward to hearing from you!