Business Continuity Impact Analysis
Business continuity impact analysis, usually called business impact analysis or BIA, is the process of determining how the impact of disrupting an organization's activities grows over time and using that understanding to set recovery priorities and targets. Rather than asking what might go wrong — the job of risk assessment — the BIA asks what it would cost the organization if a given activity stopped, for an hour, a day, a week, and how quickly each activity must therefore be restored. ISO 22301, the international standard for business continuity management systems, makes the BIA a foundational requirement: it drives the recovery time objectives, recovery point objectives and resource requirements on which continuity plans are built. ISO/IEC 31010 situates impact analysis within the broader family of risk-assessment techniques. The BIA's distinctive contribution is its focus on time: impact is not a single figure but a curve that rises as a disruption lengthens.
Lire la méthode complète
Connectez-vous avec un compte gratuit pour lire cette section.
Carte des méthodes
Le voisinage des méthodes apparentées — sélectionnez un nœud pour explorer.
Sources
- International Organization for Standardization. (2019). ISO 22301:2019 Security and resilience — Business continuity management systems — Requirements. ISO, Geneva. link ↗
- International Organization for Standardization. (2019). IEC 31010:2019 Risk management — Risk assessment techniques. ISO/IEC, Geneva. link ↗
Comment citer cette page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Business Continuity Impact Analysis (Business Impact Analysis, BIA). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/fr/disaster-studies/business-continuity-impact-analysis
Quelle méthode ?
Placez cette méthode aux côtés de ses plus proches parentes et lisez-les côte à côte — la bibliothèque pose les ouvrages sur la table ; le choix vous revient.
- Multi-Hazard Risk AssessmentDisaster Studies↔ comparer
- Preliminary Hazard AnalysisDisaster Studies↔ comparer
- Semi-Quantitative Risk Matrix AnalysisDisaster Studies↔ comparer
Méthodes similaires
Une erreur sur cette page ? Signalez-la ou proposez une correction →