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74% of companies without a tested BCP suffer irreversible damage — be prepared

ISO 22301 business continuity planning: business impact analysis, BCP and DRP development, crisis management, tabletop exercises, and supply chain resilience.

ISO 22301
International business continuity standard — the governance reference
74%
Of companies without a tested BCP suffer irreversible damage after a major disruption
72 hrs
Critical window: the first 72 hours determine recovery outcomes
4.8/5 on Google · 50+ reviews 25+ years experience 5 offices in Spain 500+ clients
Quick assessment

Does this apply to your business?

If a ransomware attack made your systems inaccessible for 48 hours tomorrow, do you have a documented plan specifying exactly what to do?

Do your key employees know how to respond in a crisis when they cannot access the main office or usual systems?

Have you identified your critical business processes and how long their interruption can be tolerated before damage becomes irreversible?

Do you have pre-qualified alternative suppliers for your most critical vendors or systems?

0 of 4 questions answered

Our approach

Our BCP and ISO 22301 process

01

Business Impact Analysis (BIA)

We identify critical business processes, quantify the impact of their interruption on revenue, customers, contractual obligations, and reputation, and define maximum tolerable downtime (MTD) and recovery time (RTO) and recovery point (RPO) objectives for each process.

02

Business continuity plan (BCP) design

We design the BCP with activation procedures, roles and responsibilities in crisis situations, continuity strategies for each critical process (alternative locations, manual backup processes, alternative suppliers), and internal and external communication protocols.

03

Disaster recovery plan (DRP)

We develop the DRP for critical IT systems: backup strategies, recovery sites, failover procedures, RPO and RTO objectives by system, and coordination with infrastructure and cloud providers.

04

Simulation exercises and maintenance

We conduct tabletop exercises and operational drills to validate plan effectiveness, identify gaps, and train crisis teams. We establish the maintenance and update schedule for the plan.

The challenge

A cyberattack, critical infrastructure failure, pandemic, or natural disaster can paralyse a business for days or weeks. Without a documented and tested continuity plan, the response improvises: decisions are made under extreme pressure, without clear information and without assigned roles. The cost of that improvisation — in lost revenue, abandoned customers, and reputational damage — can far exceed the cost of the original disruption.

Our solution

We develop business continuity plans (BCP) and disaster recovery plans (DRP) based on the ISO 22301 standard, adapted to each company's operational reality. From the business impact analysis (BIA) to tabletop simulations and real-time crisis management, we build the resilience capacity your organisation needs.

Business continuity planning (BCP) is the process by which an organisation systematically prepares to maintain or rapidly resume critical operations following a major disruption such as a cyberattack, natural disaster, or critical supplier failure. In Spain and the EU, the ISO 22301 international standard provides the governance framework for business continuity management systems, and regulations such as NIS2 and DORA impose formal continuity obligations on entities in critical sectors and financial services. A Business Impact Analysis (BIA) is the foundational step, identifying which processes are critical and defining maximum tolerable downtime (MTD), recovery time objectives (RTO), and recovery point objectives (RPO).

Our business continuity planning team combines ISO 22301 expertise with deep operational knowledge across industrial sectors, professional services, retail, and financial services.

Business continuity is not a regulatory compliance exercise: it is genuine preparation for an organisation to keep functioning when what should not happen does. The question that defines a company’s maturity in this area is simple: if tomorrow morning your main systems were inaccessible, your main office was unreachable, or your most critical logistics provider announced it could not operate — would your team know exactly what to do? Not in the abstract, but concretely: who calls whom, which processes are activated first, where to operate if there is no access to the office, how to communicate with customers.

The Business Impact Analysis converts this abstract question into precise answers. The BIA identifies which processes are truly critical — not all important processes, but those whose interruption for more than a determined number of hours or days generates damage that could be irreversible. That precision is what enables prioritisation of continuity resources and definition of realistic recovery objectives: how long can the business survive without the ERP system, without access to customer data, without the main production line.

The continuity plans we design are not documents that live in a folder: they are operational tools that are tested, updated, and improved systematically. Tabletop exercises — crisis simulations in a structured working session format for the leadership team — are the mechanism that makes the plan real. A company that has simulated a cyberattack, discussed critical decisions under pressure, and identified plan gaps before a real incident occurs has a fundamentally different response capacity from one that improvises when crisis arrives.

Supply chain resilience is the most frequently underestimated BCP component. Forty per cent of significant business disruptions originate in external supplier failures, not internal incidents. A robust BCP includes identification of critical suppliers, assessment of their own continuity capacity, and preparation of mitigation strategies: pre-qualified alternative suppliers, contractual continuity clauses, and safety stocks calibrated to realistic recovery time if the supplier fails. This is directly relevant to the third-party risk management obligations that NIS2 imposes on entities in critical sectors.

Why business continuity planning matters for your organisation

For most SMEs and mid-sized businesses, continuity planning is a topic for “when we’re bigger”. The result: 74% of companies without a tested BCP suffer irreversible damage — lost clients, broken contracts, permanent closure — after a serious disruption. The most common scenario is not a natural disaster: it is ransomware encrypting all servers on a Wednesday morning, cutting off access to ERP, email, and client files. Without a plan, the first 30 minutes are lost to disorganised calls. The next hours go to finding who makes decisions. And the first days are spent improvising solutions that create more problems. Every hour of downtime in critical systems costs mid-sized companies EUR 5,000 or more in lost revenue, before reputational damage is counted.

Our BCP and ISO 22301 process

Our professionals apply the ISO 22301 framework scaled to each company’s actual size. The process begins with the BIA: in three to five weeks we identify critical processes, quantify their economic impact at the 4-hour, 24-hour, and 72-hour interruption marks, and define MTD, RTO, and RPO objectives for each. On that foundation we design the BCP with concrete procedures, nominally assigned roles, and tested operational continuity strategies. We then design the DRP coordinated with infrastructure and cloud providers. The cycle closes with a tabletop exercise where the leadership team practises plan activation against a realistic scenario. If your organisation already has an enterprise risk management framework, we integrate the BCP within that framework so continuity is part of your overall risk governance.

What our business continuity service includes

The service covers the complete BIA with MTD, RTO, and RPO definitions by process, the documented BCP with activation procedures, crisis roles, continuity strategies, and communication protocols, the DRP for IT systems with backup and failover strategies, a facilitated tabletop exercise with findings report and improvement plan, and the annual maintenance calendar with one formal review included. For companies seeking ISO 22301 certification we support the process through to the certification audit.

Real results in business continuity

Companies that implement the BCP with our team reduce response time to a critical incident from hours or days to under 30 minutes from plan activation. In three tabletop exercises conducted with clients in the past year, 100% identified between two and five critical gaps in their crisis procedures that had not been detected without the simulation. None of our clients with an active BCP has suffered a disruption exceeding 4 hours in critical processes over the past three years. Implementation time for a complete BCP for a company of 20 to 100 employees is 8 to 12 weeks. For complementary technical protection, our disaster recovery service covers critical IT system restoration with RTO objectives measured in hours.

Business continuity in the Spanish regulatory and business context

Business continuity planning has moved from an optional best practice to a compliance-adjacent requirement for Spanish businesses. The EU NIS2 Directive (transposed into Spanish law through the Esquema Nacional de Seguridad and sectoral regulations) requires essential and important entities in critical sectors to implement business continuity management as part of their cybersecurity risk management framework. The DORA regulation (Digital Operational Resilience Act) imposes equivalent requirements on financial sector entities.

Beyond regulatory compliance, the business case for continuity planning has been reinforced by recent experience: the 2021 La Palma volcanic eruption, the DANA floods that affected Murcia and Valencia in 2024, and a series of significant cyber incidents affecting Spanish businesses across multiple sectors have demonstrated that disruption risk is real and material.

The business continuity management cycle

Our business continuity management advisory follows the ISO 22301:2019 standard — the international reference framework for business continuity management systems:

Business Impact Analysis (BIA): systematically identifying the organisation’s critical processes, the interdependencies between them, and the impact of disruption at different time intervals. The BIA defines Recovery Time Objectives (RTOs) and Recovery Point Objectives (RPOs) for each critical process — the maximum acceptable downtime and the maximum acceptable data loss respectively.

Risk Assessment: identifying the threats most likely to cause disruption to the organisation’s critical processes — whether IT-related (ransomware, infrastructure failure), physical (fire, flood, power outage), human (key person dependency, industrial action), or supply chain (critical supplier failure). Threat likelihood and impact are assessed to prioritise mitigation and continuity investments.

Strategy development: designing the recovery strategies for each critical process — alternative locations, manual workarounds, alternative suppliers, IT failover arrangements — that will enable the organisation to recover within the defined RTOs.

Plan documentation: producing the Business Continuity Plan (BCP), IT Disaster Recovery Plan (ITDRP), and Crisis Management Plan — the operational documents that guide the response when a disruption event occurs. Documentation must be sufficiently detailed to be usable under stress, while being regularly reviewed and updated.

Testing and exercises: the plans must be tested regularly — through tabletop exercises, technical failover tests, and full operational simulations — to verify that they work and to identify gaps. Untested plans are not effective plans.

Integration with disaster recovery

Business continuity and disaster recovery are related but distinct disciplines. Business continuity focuses on maintaining critical business operations during a disruption; disaster recovery focuses on restoring IT systems and data. Our disaster recovery team works alongside the business continuity advisory to ensure that the IT recovery plans are consistent with and support the operational continuity requirements.

Supply chain continuity

For manufacturing, logistics, and retail businesses, supply chain disruption is frequently the most material continuity risk. Supply chain continuity planning — identifying single-source dependencies, qualifying alternative suppliers, maintaining strategic inventory buffers, and mapping geographic concentration risks — is an increasingly important component of resilience management. Our enterprise risk management team incorporates supply chain risk into the overall ERM framework.

Contact our business continuity team for a BIA and resilience assessment.

Track record

Real results in business continuity

We suffered a ransomware attack in November that encrypted our main servers for four days. We had built the BCP with BMC six months earlier and that made an absolute difference: we activated the plan within the first two hours, moved critical operations to the alternative site, and maintained service to our main clients without interruption. Without the plan, it would have been a total disaster.

Southern Logistics Iberia S.L.
Managing Director

Experienced team with local insight and international reach

What you get

What our business continuity service includes

Business Impact Analysis (BIA)

Identification of critical processes, quantification of the impact of their interruption, and definition of MTD, RTO, and RPO objectives by critical process and system.

Business Continuity Plan (BCP)

Full BCP development: activation procedures, crisis management roles, continuity strategies by process, communication protocols, and supplier management in crisis situations.

Disaster Recovery Plan (DRP)

DRP development for critical IT systems: backup strategies, failover procedures, cloud provider coordination, and recovery objectives by system.

Tabletop simulation exercises

Design and facilitation of tabletop exercises for the most critical scenarios: cyberattack, loss of premises, critical supplier failure, and pandemic. Findings report and improvement plan.

Maintenance and continuous improvement

Plan review and update schedule, change management procedure for continuity-affecting changes, and ISO 22301 certification maintenance support where applicable.

Guides

Reference guides

Company formation in Las Palmas — the EU business hub with a 4% corporate tax rate

Set up a company in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. ZEC 4% corporate tax, SL incorporation, autonomous registration and full business setup for foreign entrepreneurs.

View guide

Set up your company in Spain without the hassle

Comprehensive guidance for setting up your company in Spain with professional advisory. We handle every step of the incorporation process so you can focus on your business.

View guide

Go self-employed in Spain without the bureaucratic nightmare

Everything a foreigner needs to freelance legally in Spain: NIE, autónomo registration, social security, and quarterly taxes. BMC handles the setup and ongoing compliance so you can focus on your work.

View guide

Hire in Spain without a costly legal entity setup mistake

Expanding to Spain? BMC helps foreign companies hire their first Spanish employee legally — from entity setup or EOR evaluation to payroll, contracts, and full employment law compliance.

View guide

Register your Spanish LLC (SL) — end-to-end, 10 business days

Spain does not have an LLC — but the Sociedad Limitada (SL) is the exact equivalent. BMC registers your Spanish SL end-to-end: legal advice, articles, notary, registry, NIF, and bank account in 10 business days.

View guide

Outsource your accounting and focus on growing your business

Outsource your accounting to certified professionals. Cut costs, save time, and gain real-time financial visibility.

View guide
FAQ

Frequently asked questions about business continuity planning

The BIA determines which business processes are critical and what the impact of their interruption would be over different time periods. It is the starting point because without understanding the real impact of a disruption it is not possible to prioritise continuity resources or define realistic recovery objectives. The BIA answers questions such as: how long before the first significant impact appears if this process is interrupted? How long can the business tolerate this interruption before the damage becomes irreversible?
The BCP (Business Continuity Plan) covers the continuity of business operations as a whole against any type of disruption: how to keep operating even if the main office is inaccessible, a key supplier fails, or there is a staffing crisis. The DRP (Disaster Recovery Plan) is specific to the recovery of IT systems: how to restore data, systems, and communications after a technology incident. Both are complementary and must be coordinated, but address different questions.
ISO 22301 is the international standard for business continuity management systems. It provides the framework for systematically planning, implementing, monitoring, and improving business continuity. ISO 22301 certification is a competitive differentiator in sectors where clients or regulators require demonstrated continuity capacity: financial services, telecommunications, healthcare, critical infrastructure, and large public contracts.
A robust BCP must cover at minimum: cyberattacks and ransomware (the most frequent cause of disruption in recent years), loss of main premises (fire, flood, power supply failure), critical supplier failure, mass staff unavailability (pandemic, strike), critical IT system failure, and reputational crises requiring emergency communications management.
A tabletop exercise is a crisis simulation in workshop format: a facilitator presents a disruption scenario step by step and the crisis management team discusses what actions they would take at each point, following the plan. The objective is to verify the plan works in practice, identify gaps, clarify roles and responsibilities, and train the team to respond under pressure before experiencing a real incident. It does not require interrupting operations and can be completed in half a day.
ISO 22301 requires plans to be tested and updated regularly. At minimum: an annual tabletop exercise for the most critical scenarios, a formal plan review whenever significant business changes occur (new systems, new premises, new critical suppliers, changes in the crisis management team), and a full BCP audit every two years. Plans that are not tested and updated quickly become obsolete and provide a false sense of security.
A critical supplier's failure can halt operations as severely as an internal disaster. A robust BCP includes analysis of critical suppliers, assessment of their own resilience (through continuity questionnaires or audits), and definition of mitigation strategies: pre-qualified alternative suppliers, safety stocks, and contractual continuity clauses. NIS2 requires this type of management for entities in critical sectors regarding their digital supply chain.
Yes. Crisis communication management is an essential BCP component: who speaks on behalf of the company during a crisis, what is communicated to employees, customers, media, and regulators, in what timeframes and with what messages. A poorly managed crisis communication can cause more reputational damage than the original incident. We include crisis communication protocols in all our continuity plans.
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Our team of specialists, with deep knowledge of the Spanish and European market, will guide you from day one.

Business Continuity Planning

Operations

First step

Start with a free diagnostic

Our team of specialists, with deep knowledge of the Spanish and European market, will guide you from day one.

25+
years experience
5
offices in Spain
500+
clients served

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