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Preparation is a critical factor in success for emergency management. Being prepared can often reduce the damage caused by an emergency condition or situation. It will often reduce the frequency of emergency situations as well. Let’s look at some key factors in preparation: Planning, Budgeting, and Training.
Planning involves thinking about the potential emergency conditions/ situations and what we can do to minimize the probability of them happening or mitigating the impacts of the situation. This is often a difficult exercise, as we tend to go down the rabbit hole of possible emergencies. The key is here to keep the focus on some general planning, then narrow to specific. For example, you might start with an emergency communications plan before moving on to the communications necessary for a specific emergency. The next step in planning is to walk through the emergency response and identify any weaknesses or holes in the plan. Further steps then include taking action to improve on those weak areas, which might also lead to planning to improve those weaknesses over time. This puts you into a continuous improvement loop – which is exactly where you want to be.All that planning and budgeting is great, however, it will be wasted at the time of the emergency without proper training to go along with it.
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