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Month: November 2010

How to have a Disastrous Crisis

Posted on November 8, 2010December 30, 2021 by admini

Panic
Panic can take all sorts of forms:
A failure to communicate It can manifest it’s self in a communicative denial where the person or team fails to call in help from other groups or people. This can be very damaging and costly. There was one crisis I was brought to perform a post mortem on, where the team had failed to notify the management of a lost laptop. Expensive and wasteful expense.

Reacting without following process or procedure Just reacting or “shooting from the hip” can cause all sorts of chaos, both short term and long term.

Overreacting It is very important to ensure that the organization responds with the appropriate level of urgency and energy. Too much and you can excerabate the situation by having users or customers losing their trust in the organization. This is damaging short term and long term. Delivering the information in a calm and clear manner is very essential and the emotional.

How do you not panic? Have a plan, have the right people and the right attitude.

Loose focus on the objectives. Focus on the technologies issues and not the business..
At all times,the following should be the goals of everyone involved: Protecting people, Protecting the environment, Protecting the business

Waste times and resources
Before a crisis occurs, make sure you have a good idea of the people, the capabilities and objectives of the organization.

Focus on the immediate and forget about the long term implications.
In the heat of the moment, you might be tempted to use an approach that might be ethically unsound Respect the law and regulations, and people.

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So, what is a crisis or incident team? (Part 2 in the Crisis Team Series)

Posted on November 5, 2010December 30, 2021 by admini

Paul’s definition of a crisis response team (if we have to keep calling it that (to justify the budget)) is:

An operational capability that allows an organization to quickly initiate, track and coordinate the capabilities of multiple groups and individuals, with the single focused goal of solving an immediate business impacting event, quickly and effectively.

Business Impacting Event? Sometimes, we fail to leverage the abilities of an incident Response capability due to the fact that we view them as only useful during an IT security incident. They can be, and should be leveraged beyond that myopic vision of the role.

[Sidebar: This “pigeon holing” of security is a common problem that I have encountered in my career as a security professional. Security team can easily become isolated and out of touch of, due to the fact that the teams act as superior or independent of the rest of the organization. Misunderstanding, mistrust, “snobbishness” and general lack of communication are typical symptoms that I have encountered when called upon to fix, from everyone else’s perspective, a dysfunctional security team. Security is not a standalone capability, especially in today’s world, and needs to be integrated into the rest of the organizations.]

To create this change, we have to start at the individual level. To help create the capability, and to break down the barriers of stagnant traditional security models, I believe that a security professional needs to have a broader view of the world, encompassing not the only viruses, vulnerabilities, and hackers but also business impacting events or perspectives.

By adopting this approach, crisis response teams can provide valuable services across an organization. Crisis response teams should not be only be involved in an IT incident but they can help in situations dealing with the handling of a sensitive business events or geo-political situations. A good incident response team has the maturity and capabilities to handling these delicate situations with the aplomb required to bring about an effective resolution.

So what does the crisis response team do? To be successful in responding to these situations, requires the coordination and cooperation of multiple teams and individuals. And that is what drives how I define an incident and thats what a crisis team should be focused on as one of its primary objectives. it is driving forward to resolution with a fast ,multi-team coordinated response.

It is the last part of the sentence that really resonates with me. I almost want to change the name from crisis response to coordinated group adverse business event response team (but GABERT is a bit too long as an acronym).

I have had great success in supporting small and large organizations in many crisis situations where the capabilities and preparedness of the crisis response team have been leveraged.

So change the perceptions. It helps if people don’t view the IR team as a set of strange talking geeks, who only like IT and hacking. I can tell you that the majority of the IT security industry is very gregarious, and we don’t hide out in hidden cubicle with no light, despite how Hollywood might like to portray. Some of us even have sun tans.

So what do you think? Is this too ambitious, or outside the scope of IT security? Or could this approach add value to your organization and help expand the understanding and integration of the security team?

In the next article, we will talk about the principles goals and requirements around the culture of a crisis response team.

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A new series of blog posts on Crisis Response

Posted on November 2, 2010December 30, 2021 by admini

I have been through a quite few crisis with large and small organizations and I hope that these posts will help IT teams protect their people, the world and the businesses.

Why would I write a set of blog entries about crisis response? Well to be honest, I am hoping that I can generate business opportunities, and also create a online resource of information about this very important capability. I have searched across the web and found very few sites dedicated to this subject. Yes, you can find information on disaster response but I think organizations are facing few disasters (hopefully), but probably everyone has a couple of crises a year.

So let’s start. For me, crisis response is an operational capability that needs to exercised frequently, as opposed to once a year. It goes beyond the traditional world of viruses and hack attacks. It’s something that can be leveraged to help an IT organization with it’s daily activities, not just when things are going wrong.

Hopefully, you will find this information useful.

And if you want to provide feedback, I have a forums section just for crisis response. No person is an island and it is only through sharing of knowledge and experience, that we evolve.

Now, I have become a bit of a pain when it comes to posting. I need you register and I promise not to share your email with anyone else. I will also sometimes check to see whether the person registering is really a professional. And I won’t use the email for any marketing or profiteering. If you want to talk business with me, contact me.

Thanks Paul

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