Business Continuity vs. Business Resilience: What's The Difference?

Key Takeaways

  • Business continuity focuses on maintaining or restoring critical operations during disruptions through recovery objectives, backup processes, and incident-response plans.
  • Business resilience goes beyond continuity by building adaptability and agility into operations, enabling organizations to learn, evolve, and capitalize on change — not just survive it.
  • Achieving true resilience requires proactive risk management, continuous testing and training, cross-functional collaboration, and real-time visibility to detect and respond to issues swiftly.

If there is one thing organizations can take away from the past few years, it's that they are far more vulnerable than they realize. From pandemics to critical supply shortages to widespread data breaches and natural disasters, businesses that don’t have plans in place to handle and respond to emergencies are at tremendous risk.

Despite all the threats to business, some organizations survive and thrive even in the face of disruption. Our research and interviews from over 2,100 security, IT, and DevOps leaders revealed that the most advanced organizations saved an average of $48 million a year! These leaders understand the importance of resilience and use it to:

As leaders plan for inevitable crises and disruption, interest in business resilience and continuity grows. While the two terms are often used interchangeably, it’s critical to understand them and their important differences. Here’s what you need to know about business resilience and business continuity...and the essential differences between the two.

What is Business Continuity?

Business continuity is how an organization carries out mission-critical business functions during disruption and emergencies. Leaders put processes and procedures in place to prevent risks and maintain operations. Bouncing back quickly after an emergency is critical: every hour and day that a company cannot make sales and profits is detrimental to business.

Many enterprises typically use a business continuity management (BCM) team or assign an individual with the responsibility of developing guidelines, processes and protocols. With a business continuity plan, organizations can resume normal operations as quickly as possible in the event of a disruption or, worse, disaster. In the disruption-recovery context, you might hear about service availability or the relationship of vulnerabilities to risk. With larger disasters, you might enact your disaster recovery plan.

Ultimately, business continuity helps enterprises and organizations to:

  1. Protect themselves from financial losses.
  2. Ensure they remain compliant with legal and regulatory requirements, even during an emergency.

A business continuity plan protects more than just the business, too. It ensures employee safety and well-being under even dire circumstances. A continuity plan also assures employees, customers and stakeholders that the company can withstand emergencies and disruptions, which helps build trust.

Organizations use continuity plans to continue functioning and move forward when unexpected challenges arise. When planned and implemented well, they help improve the overall resilience of businesses and how well they can adapt to changing social, economic and environmental conditions.

What is Business Resilience?

Business resilience is the ability of an organization to adapt to changes to promote long-term growth. One clear definition comes from ISO 22316, describing business resilience as the ability of an organization to absorb the effects of and adapt to a changing environment.

Business resilience isn’t merely about recovery from disasters like fires or cyberattacks. Indeed, it’s much wider.

It encompasses dealing with any internal or external event that could threaten the organizational ability to achieve its mission. No entity is immune to such events — COVID-19, climate change, AI — which may individually or collectively threaten an organization’s existence.

Business resilience is a capability that must be addressed from the very top of the organizational leadership. It requires principles and mechanisms that are cascaded across the business operational model, resourced appropriately and monitored for effectiveness. In short, resilience is preparing to take on unknown challenges.

(Related reading: what is digital resilience?)

Perspectives of business resilience

Let’s look at a couple different business resilience perspectives.

Components of business resilience, for leaders

Decisions that leaders make during an emergency have long-lasting effects beyond the crisis. Focusing on resilience is a leadership skill. Using a lens of governance, risk management and compliance (GRC), resilience enables leaders to make decisions during disruptions that help the organization grow during both the current recovery and future crises.

When looking at business resilience, consider these components:

Sometimes known as strategic resilience, this involves organizational leadership prioritizing adaptability and robust decision-making to ensure objectives are met despite changing circumstances. Effective strategies incorporate:

Key actions available to leadership include taking charge and demonstrating integrity, courageously executing plans to guide the organization through challenges, and conducting honest post-crisis reviews to learn and improve.

Strategic resilience is enhanced by proactive planning, empowered leadership, and fostering a culture of preparedness for future uncertainties.

Resilience for organizations

Organizations can achieve a competitive advantage with business resilience when emergencies and crises hit. It provides sustainable growth and decreases financial volatility. Resilience also encourages and accelerates innovation as organizations consider the future of their companies and implement changes to maintain relevance and business.

Because resiliency requires a broader focus, it requires developing five crucial capabilities:

In the wake of the pandemic, multiple supply chain disruptions, and an uncertain economic climate, companies are focusing more on resilience than ever. One survey found that 84% of organizations have talked about the value of organizational resilience, and 70% plan to invest even more in building resilience.

As businesses understand more than ever how challenging long-term crises can impact them, the need to develop a more comprehensive, in-depth solution becomes apparent.

See how Heineken and Splunk partner to enable business resilience:

Business continuity vs. resilience: Harnessing both

While they have significant differences, business resiliency and continuity are not competing strategies. Strong companies use both to create a safe foundation for enduring business.

The short-term view

Continuity ensures that your business can function if a natural disaster strikes your area. However, business resilience plans for continued success even after acute events. For example, business continuity would enable a company to function in the event of an earthquake.

In contrast, many leaders fear a local or global economic recession — this is not an acute event. A resiliency plan allows organizations to maintain business and continue to succeed even in a more challenging economic environment. They can adapt to a recession and thrive even during a downturn.

The long-term view

Business resilience takes continuity to the next level. Instead of a set number of processes, it is a framework integrated into the very company culture. Business resilience requires a more in-depth strategy, including:

While business continuity plans are critical to maintaining function during short-term disasters, resilient organizations make themselves less vulnerable to disasters and crises over the long-term. For example, companies that promote a hybrid or work-from-home model with fully integrated, cloud-enabled software are less likely to be impacted when natural disasters or pandemics don’t allow employees to work in the office. They can pivot quickly and don’t require a fundamental shift.

A key difference is how you achieve each one: Business continuity plans are driven by process, while business resilience is a more strategic approach to changing environments. Resiliency takes a broader approach, and though it may include business continuity planning, it requires integrating strategies and attitudes to embed in the very company culture.

Achieving long-term success with resiliency

For a long time, businesses have prepared for acute emergencies. A sudden natural disaster, outage or data breach means companies prepare with specific steps and processes until everything returns to normal. However, the past few years have made businesses aware that emergencies can last months, even years. Success requires riding above these challenging times and succeeding with flexibility and forethought.

Business resiliency helps organizations do just that. They can be ready for the future and have the appropriate resources to thrive in any situation. By investing in both continuity and resiliency, organizations will ensure they have both the strategic and operational factors needed to succeed in the future of business.

Related Articles

SNMP & SNMP Monitoring, Explained
Learn
7 Minute Read

SNMP & SNMP Monitoring, Explained

Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) allows administrators to maintain nearly all aspects of a network — here are the tools and commands admins can put to use.
Superapps: What They Are and How They Work
Learn
4 Minute Read

Superapps: What They Are and How They Work

Approving and adopting new enterprise software is hard — superapps simplify the process by putting everything in one box, an ecosystem of tools in one interface
What is Applied Observability?
Learn
4 Minute Read

What is Applied Observability?

Applied observability is one of the most important emerging topics in tech and science, here's how teams use data as evidence to monitor and improve systems
Product Analytics 101: Definition, Metrics & Tools
Learn
9 Minute Read

Product Analytics 101: Definition, Metrics & Tools

Maximizing the quality and performance of a product doesn't end at launch — product analytics allow us to monitor and act on data to refine and optimize services
What Are TTPs? Tactics, Techniques & Procedures Explained
Learn
4 Minute Read

What Are TTPs? Tactics, Techniques & Procedures Explained

Analyzing a threat takes a robust and comprehensive lens. Digging into the tactics, techniques, and procedures of a given cyber-attack can help us stay prepared.
What is Data Anonymization?
Learn
5 Minute Read

What is Data Anonymization?

Protecting customer data, especially PII, is absolutely critical for any business. Data anonymization is just one way security teams are securing data without sacrificing strong analysis.
Data Aggregation: How It Works
Learn
4 Minute Read

Data Aggregation: How It Works

Without aggregation, insights from a given data set will lack value and accuracy. Aggregation is the first step toward unlocking the story behind the numbers.
SQL vs. NoSQL Today: Databases, Differences & When To Use Which
Learn
7 Minute Read

SQL vs. NoSQL Today: Databases, Differences & When To Use Which

Trying to decide on the right database type? SQL and NoSQL each have their own pros and cons, from relational to schema-less, to vertical and horizontal scaling.
SOC Metrics: Security Metrics & KPIs for Measuring SOC Success
Learn
8 Minute Read

SOC Metrics: Security Metrics & KPIs for Measuring SOC Success

Maintaining a keen eye on SOC success is critical in any security operation. Join us as we discuss common KPIs, and how to leverage metrics for improvement.