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crisismanagement

Crisis management refers to organizational processes to prepare for, respond to, and recover from events that threaten operations, safety, or reputation. It employs an all-hazards approach, integrating risk assessment, business continuity, and crisis communications to limit damage and restore normalcy.

The process typically includes preparedness (risk identification, business continuity plans, training and drills), detection and assessment

Central to crisis management is a designated crisis management team or incident command structure, with roles

Frameworks and standards often inform practice, including incident command systems, business continuity management, ISO 22301 for

The objective is to minimize harm, protect people and assets, safeguard operations, preserve public trust, and

(monitoring,
triage,
determining
severity
and
potential
impacts),
response
(activation
of
crisis
management
team,
incident
command,
mobilization
of
resources,
internal
and
external
communications),
and
recovery
and
learning
(restoration
of
critical
functions,
post-incident
review,
and
implementation
of
improvements).
such
as
incident
commander,
operations,
logistics,
communications,
legal,
and
IT.
Coordination
with
external
stakeholders,
regulators,
customers,
suppliers,
and
the
media
is
common.
Tools
include
crisis
communications
plans,
dashboards,
notification
systems,
and
data
backup
and
cybersecurity
capabilities.
continuity
management,
ISO
31000
for
risk
management,
and
cross-sector
guidelines.
Types
of
crises
vary,
including
natural
disasters,
cybersecurity
incidents,
financial
shocks,
supply
chain
disruptions,
reputational
damage,
and
workplace
emergencies.
enable
rapid
recovery.
Ongoing
improvement
relies
on
drills,
after-action
reviews,
and
updates
to
plans
and
training.