Does your business have a plan for what to do when things go awry? That means a clear set of instructions that everyone knows about and can follow when disruptions to the normal working environment happen. It needs to be more than some sticky notes on a whiteboard or a set of bullet points. There is no time like now to assess your risk points and define the processes that will keep your business running smoothly no matter what the universe throws at you.
Your business should have a business recovery plan to document what to do when there is a disruption. We tend to think of hurricanes, tornados, floods, and fires, but they are a small percentage of the things that can disrupt your business. Missing parts for a device, delayed delivery of new blades for a cutter, power outages due to construction accidents, and blocked building access due to unanticipated issues are only some of the challenges printers face daily. You cannot plan for every possibility, but you can build a process to address anything.
Before trying to identify everything that can happen, start with the highest level. The chart shown above is one approach, but you may find a different path depending on the size of your business, the number of locations you support, your current business recovery plan, and your partner network. In each box indicating activation of a recovery plan, consider what you have documented, what is not documented, and your path to defining what the team should do when faced with these situations.
Let’s do a deep dive into the question of shipping disruption as an example. Can you ship finished goods from your location? Do you have alternatives?
The answer may be more complex than yes or no. Some work may ship from 4over on your behalf, while other work may ship from your shop. You may also have shipping relationships with a variety of providers, including USPS. Start by listing all of your shipping options, even ones you know of but don’t use.
Carrier |
Relationship |
Shipping Methods |
Support Contact |
This is the company you do business with directly. |
This might be a contractual relationship with contracts guiding their obligations and yours, or you may be an occasional user who calls when you need a pickup. Be detailed. |
Do they pick up, or do you deliver to a common location? Do you pack boxes and tubes for delivery? Do you palletize? Identify how you deliver material to each shipper, including the trucks you operate. |
Who do you call in case something goes wrong? Who will call you if there is a problem? |
DHL |
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FedEx |
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UPS |
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USPS |
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Owned Trucks |
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Courier Services |
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Private Carriers |
This table will help you with the big picture; let’s look at some scenarios you may want to test.
Finally, you may be wondering if the new AI technologies can help you identify risks and form a plan. The answer is that they can, but like most new technology, there is a significant opportunity to make mistakes. Simply asking ChatGPT to build you a Shipping Disruption Plan or prompting Bard to write a guide to shipping disruption caused by weather could produce a good set of guidelines, but unless you test the recommended process, you will not know if it can work practically when needed.
Your 4over team is always available to discuss your needs. Contact your representatives to check on your options if a challenge happens.