We’re talking about resilience in October. In my last blog, I mentioned that our family has a grab-and-go folder with all our important info in it. However, does your NPO have a grab-and-go folder for its important data in case a disaster hits?
Data loss from a fire (or any disaster) can be catastrophic, especially for a nonprofit organisation that may rely heavily on irreplaceable donor, grant, program, and financial records.
Here’s a comprehensive list of best practice measures you should have in place to protect your data in the event of a disaster like a fire:
- Store all essential data in the cloud with a reputable provider (Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, Dropbox Business or Box). If you set up automatic syncing and version history, you’ll keep older copies safe. This keeps your data off-site and safe, even if your office and computer are destroyed.
- Follow the 3-2-1 backup rule – 3 copies of your data, 2 different formats (cloud + external hard drive), 1 copy off-site (in the cloud or outside your office)
- Create a disaster recovery plan – how you will recover data, staff roles in disaster response, a communication plan with your stakeholders, contact info for IT support, vendors, insurance, etc.
- Keep an updated list of all hardware (computers, servers, drives), software and digital platforms, what data is stored where and who owns it
- Be cybersecurity aware – use multi-factor authentication (everywhere), password managers and strong passwords. Update your software regularly and make sure your anti-virus is up to date.
- Train your staff about phishing and data awareness, and make sure people can only access what they need. If someone leaves, revoke their access immediately.
- Check your insurance covers data recovery charges.
Last, but not least, run a disaster simulation to see just how prepared you really are should things go wrong.
If you need a hand, reach out. Our EM Solutions team can help you run an audit and make sure that your organisation is data-safe at all times.
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