Thursday, January 1, 2009

Disaster Planning and Recovery or Noncommercial Institutional and Contract Foodservice Management

Disaster Planning and Recovery: A Guide for Facility Professionals

Author: Alan M Levitt

"The focus of this guide is to assist you in planning for all the vital factors and imperative considerations essential in enhancing the likelihood of your organization's continuity and survival when impacted by an out-of-course event: planning to prevent disasters, planning to reduce the likelihood of disasters, planning to deal with disasters, and planning to recover after a disaster has affected the organization." — Alan M. Levitt

The only complete, hands-on guide to disaster planning, Disaster Planning and Recovery provides proven strategies, tools, and techniques for helping your company plan for, cope with, and recover from cataclysmic events. Internationally recognized business continuity expert Alan M. Levitt tells you what you need to know to avoid having natural and man-made disasters become business disasters. You'll find out how to:


• Create an effective plan in advance
• Reduce the likelihood of disasters
• Maintain functioning when disaster strikes
• Mobilize staff safely and efficiently during an emergency
• Reduce costs of and recovery time following an out-of-course event
• Work effectively with key departments, including IT, HR, maintenance
• Minimize stress on staff members
• And much more



Earthquakes, floods, fires, tornadoes . . . there isn't much you can do to stop them from happening, but there are steps you can take to prevent natural and man-made disasters from turning into business disasters. And that is what this book is all about: minimizing the damage done to your business by cataclysmic external events.

The only complete,practical guide of its kind, Disaster Planning and Recovery shows facility professionals how to prepare for, cope with, and rebound from a disaster. Alan Levitt clearly demonstrates that the first major step toward minimizing risk and optimizing recovery time following an emergency is to formulate a comprehensive disaster plan. Drawing upon his years of experience as a business continuity expert—and using fascinating and instructive vignettes and case studies (many of them previously unpublished) to illustrate his points—he shows you how to develop the most cost-effective plan possible.

Rather than offer a set of one-size-fits-all checklists and procedures, Levitt supplies a rational framework and proven strategies for formulating a plan tailored to your business. He shows you how to set reasonable goals that will allow you to react more quickly and effectively without losing sight of business outcomes. And he provides the means for researching and conducting the five phases of a comprehensive disaster/recovery plan: identifying potential disasters; quantifying the risk of occurrence; establishing parameters for reducing that risk; forecasting the potential impact a disaster can have on personnel, plant, and business processes; and establishing systems for counterbalancing those impacts.

Throughout Disaster Planning and Recovery, the emphasis is on human factors. Levitt describes techniques for efficiently mobilizing staff in an emergency, working effectively with key departments, such as IT, and most importantly, easing the stress that disasters can impose on staff members. Disaster Planning and Recovery is an indispensable resource for facility professionals, human resources managers, building owners and managers, architects, designers, and planners.

Booknews

Provides proven strategies, tools, and techniques to help companies plan for, cope with, and recover from man-made and natural cataclysmic events. Explains how to create an effective plan in advance; reduce the likelihood of disasters; maintain functioning when disaster strikes; mobilize staff safely and efficiently during an emergency; reduce costs of and recovery time following an out-of-course event; work effectively with key departments, including IT, HR, and maintenance; and minimize stress on staff members. Includes a glossary. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.



Table of Contents:
Preface
Introduction1
Ch. 1The Facility Professional13
Ch. 2Why a Disaster Planning and Recovery Strategy?63
Ch. 3Problems and Performance117
Ch. 4Prescriptives141
Ch. 5Risk Management159
Ch. 6Managing Risks: Reducing the Probability of Problems, Impacts, and Consequences205
Ch. 7The Vulnerability Search, Vulnerability Analysis, and Vulnerability Rectification243
Ch. 8Contingency Management265
Ch. 9"...But the Process is Tedious"275
Ch. 10Communication281
Ch. 11Myths and Some Precarious Perceptions327
App. IBefore, During, and After Checklist339
App. IIThe Vulnerability Search: A Model Vulnerability Search Checklist345
Glossary377
Index403

New interesting textbook: Facing Unpleasant Facts or The Last Campaign

Noncommercial, Institutional, and Contract Foodservice Management

Author: Mickey Warner

A pioneer in institutional foodservice offers a practical up-to-date introduction concerned with volume feeding operations which present unique challenges and have different requirements from restaurants and other commercial businesses. Contains an overview of the contract foodservice industry and its key players, guidelines for financial planning, menu management, cost controls and marketing. Features the latest information on contract management firms, career opportunities available within them and techniques to establish a career plan.

Booknews

A guide to virtually every aspect of contemporary noncommercial foodservice management. Covers foodservice operations in business and industry, hospitals, schools, and correctional facilities. Contains guidelines for establishing operating objectives, financial planning, cost control, menu planning, and marketing, plus an overview of how the industry is organized and the four major companies involved. Includes numerous charts, checklists, and operating forms. Appendices include a list of professional associations and publications, and a sample dining service agreement. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



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