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After years spent dealing with worms and Trojan
horses, businesses should be used to protecting
themselves from viruses with peculiar names. But as
world health officials continue to monitor the
spread of swine flu, IT departments know this is one
bug that will demand more by way of a deterrent than
a timely antivirus update.
Indeed, if swine flu were to escalate to the pandemic
that some experts were predicting when news of this
deadly virus first broke in Mexico, the
business continuity plans of many UK companies would
be tested for the first time in a real-life
situation.
Remote working as part of your business continuity
planning
As the Department of Health delivers informational
leaflets to every household and the first few
precautionary school closures are announced, the
number of workers wishing to - or being required to
- stay at home in the coming months could quickly
rise to a level which further threatens an already
fragile economy. Not to mention your own business.
So could your network accommodate a sudden rise in
demand for remote working? Many organisations have
implemented remote desktop connections and VPNs
(virtual private networks) in recent years but some
have not. Equally some firms have given greater
consideration to the security issues associated with
inbound network connections than others.
Now would be an opportune time to review remote
access to your company network. The current advice
from leading health officials is to prepare for the
worst and hope for the best. In fact, it need not be
swine flu at all - remote working is now playing a
key role in business continuity and disaster
recovery plans for a wide range of scenarios.
If you have any questions on business continuity
planning, please call and ask to speak to a Net Technical
Solutions account manager today. |