With more than 40% of employees forced to work-from-home during COVID-19, Emergency Management teams in Australia need to be able to navigate potential disasters from afar and communicate with their staff regardless of their location.
With more than 40% of employees forced to work-from-home during COVID-19, Emergency Management teams in Australia need to be able to navigate potential disasters from afar and communicate with their staff regardless of their location.
With more than 80% of the Australian population suffering from poor smoke during the 2019-20 Bushfire Crisis, WHS Managers can adopt air quality index mapping to better support their teams.
To maximize efficiency and keep your people safe, a digital security emergency preparedness program can help your team navigate physical threats.
2020 brought to the forefront how the old approach to managing disasters is no longer enough to support organizations managing multiple critical events.
To better prepare for physical climate risks, Risk Professionals can leverage technology to minimize the impacts of natural catastrophes.
As organisations worldwide grapple with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, localised threats from protests to severe weather continue to challenge security and safety professionals to keep employees safe whether they are working from home or onsite. Whilst organisations may consider adopting an emergency notification system to improve stakeholder communication, ongoing costs and budget pressures are often significant barriers to acquiring a system. Fortunately, with the Australian Government release of the Protective Security Framework (PSPF), security and safety professionals can now justify the adoption of an emergency notification system to protect people and assets, thus complying with the physical security outcome of the PSPF.
Concerned about increased insurance premiums heading into 2021? Combined critical events including the 2019/20 Bushfire Crisis, COVID-19, and massive losses witnessed across the global insurance market all contributed to increased prices, reduced coverage, the exclusion of specific risks, and lowered policy limits.
Now needing to update to 21st century business-as-usual systems, 2020 was the technological wake up call risk management teams had to have.
More than ever, crisis response teams worldwide need to encourage team resilience to keep navigating the ongoing challenges from 2020 and those emerging in 2021.
To amplify critical event management capabilities, the right digitals tools can keep you connected with stakeholders, free up your key people, and reduce the risk of crisis burnout and fatigue.