Cascade prepare employees for the unpredictable

-

Leading HR software provider Cascade has introduced a creative new approach to planning for the unknown, following the first in a series of disaster recovery training events.

To ensure that their level of customer service remains uncompromised, the company has launched a series of monthly training sessions to test employees to their limits in the event of the unexpected.

With the aim of recreating a different disaster scenario every month the first session focused upon Cascade’s hosted service. Twenty-five per cent of its clients currently opt for the security of housing and maintaining their servers in Cascade’s dedicated external facility, rather than their own premises. This equates to thousands of people that could be without a HR and payroll system, if disaster was to strike at that facility or if the team wasn’t rigorously trained and prepared.

Dan Edwards, Cascade’s software development director explains: “Placing staff under these pressures may sound like an extreme approach to training but so much of our business revolves around customer service. We therefore need to ensure that if a disaster did occur we would be able to deal with it, with little or no disruption to clients.”

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

To recreate the random nature of a disaster, team members and servers were drawn from a hat so that, just like in a real situation, there was no time to prepare specific equipment and no opportunity to accommodate for staff being ill or on annual leave. Services to the chosen servers were then turned off so that staff could begin the recovery operation using a ‘dummy’ client.

The team successfully resolved the situation within their 2.5 hour target, meaning that if the disaster had been real, client work agreements would have been fulfilled with time to spare.

“Many companies prepare disaster recovery instruction manuals but few test these paper-based strategies to check that they work in reality,” continues Edwards. “This exercise has not only proven that we are resilient should the worst happen, but more importantly we have also shown that should an external disaster occur in our hosted data centre, it would not result in a catastrophe for our hosted service clients,” says Edwards.

Cascade will continue to recreate different disaster scenarios across all areas of the business each month, with forthcoming sessions focusing upon how the business would cope without a customer service desk, or without power. Knowledge gained from each training exercise will then be passed on to clients so that they too could cope better in the event of a disaster.

Latest news

Exclusive: London bus drivers’ ‘dignity’ at risk as strikes loom over welfare concerns

London bus drivers raise concerns over fatigue and lack of facilities as potential strikes escalate long-standing welfare issues.

Whistleblowing reports ‘surge by up to 250 percent’ at councils as new rights take effect

Whistleblowing cases are rising across UK councils as stronger workplace protections come into force, though concerns remain about underreporting of serious issues.

Bullying and harassment to become regulatory breaches under new FCA rules

New rules will bring bullying and harassment into regulatory scope, as firms face rising reports of workplace misconduct.

Personalising the Benefits Experience: Why Employees Need More Than Just Information

This article explores how organisations can move beyond passive, one-size-fits-all communication to deliver relevant, timely, and simplified benefits experiences that reflect employee needs and life stages.
- Advertisement -

Grant Wyatt: When the love dies – when staying is riskier than quitting

When people fall out of love with their employer, or feel their employer has fallen out of love with them, what follows is rarely a clean exit.

£30bn pension savings window opens for employers ahead of 2029 reforms

UK employers could unlock billions in National Insurance savings by expanding pension salary sacrifice schemes before new limits take effect in 2029.

Must read

Natalie Ellis: Right to work compliance – what you need to know

Ensuring your business remains compliant with employment law is more critical than ever - particularly when it comes to right to work checks.

Isabel Naidoo: The tip of the HR iceberg: A look at the landscape

I love HR. I know that’s pretty contentious, after all there seems to be a proliferation of HR bashing happening on a constant basis (at least in my twitter newsfeed!).
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you