Following the completion of the Risk Analysis and Review (RAR) and Business Impact
The purpose of the BCS phase is to identify and implement practical measures that enable GRA to prevent disruptions, reduce the impact of incidents, and recover critical business functions within acceptable timeframes.
A Business Continuity Strategy provides the bridge between identifying risks and developing recovery plans.
It establishes the resources, arrangements, technologies, facilities, and procedures required to maintain or restore critical services during a disruption.
For GRA, continuity strategies are particularly important because interruptions to regulatory oversight, licensing administration, enforcement activities, and stakeholder communications may affect Singapore's gambling regulatory environment and public confidence.
This chapter explores how GRA can develop and implement effective mitigation, prevention, and recovery strategies for its critical business functions.
Business Continuity Strategy aims to ensure that GRA can:
The selected strategies must be aligned with the recovery requirements identified during the Business Impact Analysis phase.
Before developing continuity strategies, GRA should identify its critical business functions.
Examples may include:
|
Critical Business Function |
Purpose |
|
Licensing and Permit Administration |
Processing and approving gambling-related licences and permits |
|
Regulatory Compliance Monitoring |
Monitoring compliance of licensed operators |
|
Enforcement and Investigations |
Conducting investigations and enforcement actions |
|
Regulatory Intelligence and Surveillance |
Monitoring emerging threats and suspicious activities |
|
Stakeholder Communications |
Communicating with government agencies, operators, and the public |
|
Regulatory Information Systems |
Supporting licensing, compliance, and enforcement activities |
|
Corporate Support Services |
Human resources, finance, procurement, and administration |
Each critical function requires appropriate continuity strategies to ensure operational resilience.
Mitigation strategies are proactive measures implemented to reduce the likelihood or impact of disruptions.
The objective is to strengthen resilience before an incident occurs.
To reduce the risk of system outages affecting licensing operations, GRA may implement:
These measures reduce the likelihood of prolonged service interruptions.
Given the sensitive nature of regulatory information, cybersecurity risks represent a significant threat.
Mitigation measures may include:
These controls reduce the likelihood of cyber incidents affecting regulatory operations.
Many GRA operations depend on technology vendors, cloud providers, and telecommunications partners.
Mitigation measures include:
These measures reduce dependency risks and improve service continuity.
Prevention strategies focus on avoiding disruptions altogether by strengthening organisational readiness and preparedness.
GRA's regulatory responsibilities depend heavily on skilled personnel.
Prevention measures may include:
These measures ensure continuity when key personnel are unavailable.
Physical disruptions may affect access to GRA offices.
Preventive measures may include:
These arrangements minimise disruption to regulatory activities.
Regulatory data and investigation records are critical assets.
Preventive controls include:
These measures protect information integrity and confidentiality.
Recovery strategies focus on restoring critical business functions after a disruption has occurred.
These strategies are developed based on Recovery Time Objectives (RTOs) and Recovery Point Objectives (RPOs) identified during the Business Impact Analysis phase.
If GRA's primary office becomes unavailable, alternative arrangements should be activated.
Recovery options may include:
This enables regulatory operations to continue despite facility disruptions.
Technology recovery is essential for restoring critical systems supporting regulatory functions.
For the Licensing Management System
|
Recovery Requirement |
Strategy |
|
RTO: 4 Hours |
High-availability failover infrastructure |
|
RPO: 15 Minutes |
Real-time database replication |
|
System Recovery |
Cloud-based disaster recovery environment |
|
User Access |
Secure remote access capability |
These strategies support rapid restoration of services.
Maintaining communications during a disruption is critical.
Alternative communication channels may include:
This ensures stakeholders remain informed during incidents.
When selecting continuity strategies, GRA should evaluate options based on:
Will the strategy achieve the required recovery objectives?
Is the strategy financially justifiable?
Can the strategy be implemented successfully?
Are sufficient personnel, technology, facilities, and funding available?
Does the strategy support regulatory and ISO 22301 requirements?
The selected strategies should provide the most appropriate balance between risk reduction, operational effectiveness, and cost.
|
Critical Business Function |
Potential Disruption |
Mitigation Strategy |
Prevention Strategy |
Recovery Strategy |
|
Licensing and Permit Administration |
Licensing system outage, cyberattack, staff unavailability |
High-availability licensing platform, database redundancy, cybersecurity controls |
Cross-training licensing officers, documented procedures, role backups |
Activate alternate processing site, manual licensing procedures, restore systems from backup |
|
Regulatory Compliance Monitoring |
Loss of monitoring systems, communication failure with operators |
Automated monitoring tools, redundant communication channels |
Regular system maintenance, compliance monitoring procedures |
Use alternate monitoring tools, deploy manual reporting processes, restore monitoring platforms |
|
Enforcement and Investigations |
Case management system failure, loss of evidence records, staff shortages |
Secure evidence repositories, replicated investigation databases |
Investigation protocols, succession planning, access controls |
Recover investigation records from backups, activate alternate investigators, utilise alternate work locations |
|
Regulatory Intelligence and Surveillance |
Intelligence platform outage, cyber compromise, data corruption |
Data replication, network segmentation, security monitoring |
Threat intelligence monitoring, data validation controls |
Restore intelligence systems, utilise alternate intelligence sources, recover databases |
|
Stakeholder Communications |
Email outage, telecommunications disruption, misinformation incidents |
Multiple communication platforms, emergency notification systems |
Communication procedures, media training, stakeholder contact management |
Activate crisis communication channels, use alternative communication methods, deploy spokespersons |
|
Regulatory Information Systems |
System failures, cyberattacks, infrastructure outages |
Disaster recovery infrastructure, real-time replication, cloud resilience |
Patch management, security monitoring, preventive maintenance |
Failover to disaster recovery environment, restore applications and databases |
|
Regulatory Policy and Decision-Making |
Unavailability of decision-makers, inaccessible records |
Digital document management, delegated authority structure |
Succession planning, policy documentation, governance procedures |
Activate alternate approval authorities, access remote document repositories |
|
Gambling Operator Oversight |
Inability to monitor operator activities, loss of regulatory data |
Secure monitoring systems, redundant data collection mechanisms |
Regular oversight reviews, operator reporting requirements |
Manual monitoring processes, alternative reporting arrangements with operators |
|
Incident Reporting and Escalation |
Failure of incident management systems, communication breakdown |
Automated alerting systems, redundant escalation channels |
Incident response procedures, staff training |
Activate manual escalation procedures, use emergency contact lists |
|
Public Complaints and Feedback Management |
Customer service disruption, case management failure |
Multiple complaint submission channels, case tracking systems |
Service procedures, workforce cross-training |
Activate alternative service channels, manual complaint processing |
|
Human Resource Management |
Workforce shortages, inability to access HR systems |
Workforce planning, cloud-based HR systems |
Succession planning, employee wellness programmes |
Redeploy personnel, activate alternate staffing arrangements |
|
Finance and Procurement |
Financial system outage, supplier disruptions |
Financial data backups, approved supplier lists |
Supplier assessments, procurement governance |
Manual procurement processes, emergency purchasing procedures |
|
Legal and Regulatory Affairs |
Loss of legal records, inability to access regulatory documents |
Secure document repositories, legal records backup |
Document retention controls, access management |
Recover legal documentation, activate alternate legal support arrangements |
|
Information and Records Management |
Data loss, corruption, unauthorised access |
Data backup, encryption, access controls |
Information governance framework, records retention programme |
Restore records from backup systems, recover archived information |
|
Corporate Support Services |
Office closure, utility failures, facility disruptions |
Alternate facilities, backup utilities, facility resilience measures |
Building maintenance, physical security controls |
Relocate staff to alternate sites, implement remote working arrangements |
|
Strategy Category |
Objective |
Examples within GRA |
|
Mitigation |
Reduce the likelihood and impact of disruptions |
Cybersecurity controls, redundancy, supplier resilience, monitoring systems |
|
Prevention |
Prevent incidents from occurring where possible |
Staff training, preventive maintenance, succession planning, governance controls |
|
Recovery |
Restore critical services within agreed recovery timeframes |
Disaster recovery sites, alternate workplaces, backup systems, manual workarounds |
The implementation of these business continuity strategies enables GRA to:
Once strategies have been approved, GRA should establish a structured implementation plan.
Implementation should be monitored through defined milestones and governance reviews.
Business Continuity Strategies should be regularly reviewed to ensure continued effectiveness.
Examples of performance indicators include:
|
Indicator |
Measurement |
|
System Recovery Performance |
Achievement of RTO and RPO targets |
|
Exercise Results |
Success rate during continuity exercises |
|
Staff Readiness |
Training completion rates |
|
Supplier Resilience |
Compliance with SLA requirements |
|
Incident Recovery Performance |
Actual recovery times during disruptions |
These metrics support continual improvement and organisational resilience.
ISO 22301 requires organisations to establish and implement continuity strategies that support the continuity and recovery of prioritised activities.
For GRA, Business Continuity Strategies should align with:
The outputs from this phase become the foundation for the next phase of the BCM Planning Methodology: Plan Development.
The Business Continuity Strategy phase transforms the findings of the Risk Analysis and Review and Business Impact Analysis into practical solutions that enable the Gambling Regulatory Authority (GRA) to withstand disruptions and recover critical services efficiently.
By implementing mitigation, prevention, and recovery strategies, GRA can strengthen its operational resilience, protect critical regulatory functions, and maintain stakeholder confidence during adverse events
Effective continuity strategies ensure that essential services such as licensing administration, regulatory oversight, enforcement operations, intelligence gathering, and stakeholder communications remain available even during significant disruptions.
Through continual review, testing, and enhancement of these strategies, GRA can maintain a resilient and adaptive BCM programme that supports its mission of safeguarding Singapore's gambling regulatory environment and upholding the highest standards of regulatory excellence.
| eBook 2: Implementing Business Continuity Management for GRA | ||||
| C1 | C2 | C3 | C4 | C5 |
| C7 | C8 | C9 | C10 | C11 |
To learn more about the course and schedule, click the buttons below for the BCM-300 Business Continuity Management Implementer [BCM-3] and the BCM-5000 Business Continuity Management Expert Implementer [BCM-5].
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