The building blocks of operational resilience for financial services firms
December 22, 2021
How ready is your company to become operationally resilient?
If you aren’t sure, you will need an answer soon because the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) PS21/3 rule requires financial firms to have carried out a number of activities towards operational resilience by 31 March 2022. With time running out, how can firms ensure they are ready by the deadline?
fscom’s experts in financial crime, cyber security and regulatory compliance offered their advice in a recent webinar. The speakers were:
- Alison Donnelly, Director of Regulatory Compliance and Head of Payments.
- Nick Gumbley, Associate Director for Cyber Security.
- Nick Wright, Senior Manager for Payments.
- Identify a programme sponsor at Board level who is responsible for the drive towards operational resilience. Only someone in the C-suite will have sufficient visibility and authority across the business and be able to take executive action and get people to come together in a room.
- Identify a project manager who can provide a bird’s eye view of the operational resilience requirements across the business. This may require bringing in independent support if your business lacks a project management function.
- Identify the key stakeholders to involve in this process – likely the heads of functions like technology, business operations, legal, risk management, procurement, information security and the MLRO.
- Prioritise and plan from now through to 2025, allocating the appropriate resources to meet the 2022 and 2025 deadlines.
- Recognise that communications are important in the event of disruption to business services. The FCA expects that companies determine who is responsible for internal and external communications. Holding statements and playbooks should be drafted and communications should be timely, meaningful and relevant to the audience.
- Train staff in the risks that their actions could pose to operational resilience, such as information security breaches. Offer enhanced training to any high-risk personnel who have a key role in maintaining important business services.
