Would we know if an account was compromised?

Are sensitive emails actually protected once they’re sent?

If someone clicks the wrong link, what happens next?

Which systems come back first?

How much data can you actually afford to lose?

Who runs recovery if the team is scattered?

Would we pass an audit if it happened today?

Do our policies actually match what auditors want to see?

Which gaps are putting our certifications or contracts at risk?

Who keeps customers informed?

Where does work continue?

Which systems matter most right now?

If our office is unavailable, where does work actually happen?

A Plan That Works Because it’s Built Around Your Business.

Most businesses don’t have a plan; they have a false sense of security.

Assess Your Business

We start by understanding how your business operates, which systems your team depends on most, and where an interruption would cause the most damage.

Build the Plan

Define fallback workflows, communication paths, and recovery steps for power loss, hardware failure, storms, data corruption, and human error.

Test and Refine

Review, test, and adjust as your business evolves, so when something breaks, the response is calm, coordinated, and familiar.

Stay Supported

Day to day issues are resolved the first time whenever possible. Fast. Friendly. First time fix every time, even when conditions aren’t ideal.

They keep this part of our business running smoothly. Their response times are great, which means we are able to keep our focus on serving our clients.”

– Martha Foster (CPA, Fast Forward Accounting)

Take Back Your Time

Business continuity isn’t about recovering later. It’s about staying productive when conditions aren’t ideal.
Get clarity on how your business keeps moving, no matter what happens.
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Common Questions About Business Continuity

Get the answers you need to keep your business running through any disruption.

No. Disaster recovery focuses on restoring systems and data after loss. Business continuity focuses on how work continues during disruptions. They complement each other but address different moments in an incident.
Power outages, storms, internet failures, hardware issues, data corruption, user error, and temporary loss of access to a location. Continuity planning focuses on realistic, everyday risks, not just extreme disasters.
Any business that depends on technology, communication, or regulated workflows benefits from continuity planning. Even short outages can create outsized impacts without a clear plan.
At least annually, and anytime systems, locations, or compliance requirements change. Testing ensures the plan still works in real conditions.
It’s intentionally flexible. Plans are built around how your business operates so they adapt to different scenarios instead of locking you into a single response.