By Agility Recovery
For credit unions, continuity is about more than compliance, it’s about protecting member trust, safeguarding assets, and ensuring uninterrupted access to essential financial services.
Yet, as the threat landscape continues to evolve – from natural disasters to cyberattacks—many institutions are realizing that yesterday’s continuity plans aren’t enough for today’s risks.
Here are the Top 10 Business Continuity Issues every credit union should address to strengthen resilience and recovery readiness. (Note: These aren’t ranked by importance; each presents significant risks that deserve proactive planning.)
Most credit unions rely on third-party service providers for everything from core processing to payment networks. If one of those vendors experiences downtime, your member services may grind to a halt.
How to prepare:
A prolonged power outage can instantly shut down branches, call centers, and online services. Without a reliable backup strategy, credit unions risk major operational and financial losses.
How to prepare:
The NCUA and FFIEC both require documented, board-approved, and tested business continuity plans. Falling short can lead to findings, penalties, or worse, member service disruptions during a real event.
How to prepare:
Branch closures or access restrictions shouldn’t mean service stops. As hybrid work and digital operations expand, continuity plans must account for both physical and remote teams.
How to prepare:
When disruption strikes, confusion can spread faster than solutions. Communication breakdowns slow recovery, impact decision-making, and erode member trust.
How to prepare:
While cybersecurity often takes center stage, it’s one piece of a much larger resilience picture. A ransomware attack can lock your data, disable systems, and halt member access in minutes.
How to prepare:
Without reliable data recovery, even a minor system failure can cause major disruption. Backup systems that aren’t regularly tested are among the most common BCP failures.
How to prepare:
Severe weather, floods, wildfires, and regional power failures can directly impact facilities and staff. Credit unions with geographically dispersed branches face diverse environmental threats year-round.
How to prepare:
A continuity plan that hasn’t been updated or tested recently is a liability. Staff changes, technology upgrades, and new vendors can make a once-solid plan obsolete.
How to prepare:
At the heart of every continuity plan is the member. If members can’t access their money – or lose confidence that their institution can protect their data – the damage extends beyond downtime.
How to prepare:
Business continuity isn’t just a regulatory checkbox – it’s a promise to your members that their credit union will be there when it matters most. By addressing these ten critical issues, credit unions can strengthen resilience, reduce risk, and ensure that “people helping people” remains possible under any circumstance.
Connect with Agility Recovery to learn how we help credit unions prepare for and recover from every major threat to your branch operations.