Assessing the Impact of the Coronavirus on Your Business and Staff
Impact of Coronavirus on your Business
In a press conference on March 11, the World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced that the outbreak of the coronavirus (COVID-19) can be characterized as an official pandemic, with the risk of further global spread. As the WHO and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) continue to monitor the international situation, businesses should also take proactive steps to keep their people and operations safe.
As you start to feel the impact of the coronavirus consider the following:
Provide Guidance to Employees
- Communicate with your staff regularly and openly. Notify them of updates and policies in place that support flexible work arrangements, describe how they should deal with travel plans and outline what they should do if they or a family member are affected.
- Ensure appropriate health checks or quarantine processes are implemented and check whether your company’s policies align with guidance from the WHO and federal government.
- Support employees who express concerns, actively share crisis communication plans or tools to address discrimination in the workplace and firm preventative protocols.
Ask yourself:
- Where are my employees? Are they safe?
- Do we have remote employees in affected regions?
- Do we have the necessary remote working infrastructure, policies and mechanisms to keep our staff safe?
Share Best Practices with Employees
Encourage employees to take common-sense precautions to prevent the spread of all infectious diseases, including common illnesses like colds and flu:
- Advise employees to stay home when they are sick.
- Notify employees who have returned from a trip in an infected area they should work from home for 14 days.
- Those who have a fever at work should go home immediately and stay there for at least 24 hours, and should only return to work if they no longer have a fever without the use of fever-reducing medicine.
- Promote hand hygiene through education and availability of soap, hand sanitizers and tissues.
- Advise employees to avoid touching their face, particularly eyes, nose and mouth.
- Encourage proper cough etiquette—cough or sneeze into a tissue, sleeve or arm. Don’t use their hands.
- Remind staff to perform routine surface cleaning, particularly for high-touch surfaces.
- Avoid attending or hosting large gatherings. This is where cold, flu and other respiratory viruses are often spread.
- The Public Health Department has a webpage dedicated to novel coronavirus in English, Chinese, Spanish and Vietnamese at www.sccphd.org/coronavirus. Monitor the developing situation and keep your employees up to speed with any additional public health recommendations.
Cyber Risk and Online Scams
- According to the WHO, cyber criminals are disguising themselves as WHO, federal, state and local agencies to steal money or sensitive information. If you’re contacted by a person who appears to be from WHO or other government agencies involved in infectious disease control, verify their authenticity.
- Check file extensions of downloaded files and don’t click on suspicious links.
- If you see a scam, report it to the WHO immediately, here.
Ask yourself:
- What new avenues of attack may this pandemic create at my company?
- Are we getting our information from a legitimate, fact checked source?
- Do we have secure remote access for our employees to work from home?
Disruption to Supply Chain and Financial Projections
- Evaluate your understanding of the breadth and depth of your supply chain including the location of all first, second and third-tier suppliers. If you haven’t already done so, reach out to understand their plans, any issues they have identified and offer assistance, as appropriate.
- Prepare to implement supply chain disruption plans. Reach out to potential alternate suppliers to understand their capability to meet your needs and the amount of time they would need to react. If you don’t have an interruption plan or alternate suppliers identified, this situation presents an opportunity to create an action team to build out your supply chain risk management plan for both this and future unexpected events.
- Ensure your business continuity plans are current and address critical areas, such as contingency plans for communicating with employees and suppliers, alternative methods for transportation of both raw materials and finished goods, and ensuring access to business resources for employees who may be required to work remotely.
Ask yourself:
- What impact does recent events have on demand for our products, and are we ready to respond in real-time?
- If we have declining sales, or declining margins, how do we manage working capital?
- What sources of funding do we have access to in order to bridge and prevent declining infrastructure?
- With debt, are we prepared to drive a proactive message to lenders during a time of change?
It’s important not to overreact or panic and stay committed to taking appropriate precautions that work best for your company. Closely monitor the latest information regularly from reputable sites, such as www.who.int, www.cdc.gov and www.hhs.gov. Having a plan in place will ensure you are proactively addressing concerns from both shareholders and staff. Seek expert advice, if you need help navigating these challenges.
To Contact GROCO click Here
Dawn LeBlanc – Managing Director at Hartford InsurTech Hub
Dawn is the Managing Director at Hartford InsurTech Hub. She has Diversified expertise across insurance/financial products, innovation, marketing, regulatory, actuarial, operations, distribution and technology. Prior to joining Hartford InsurTech Hub she was the Vice President Business Solutions at Prudential Financial. Dawn attended Central Connecticut State UniversityWhere she received her Bachelor’s in Science in Mathematics/Actuarial
Avishai Ben-Tovim | CEO of MDI Health
Avishai Ben-Tovim is a sales & business development executive with years of professional experience and a drive to succeed and to innovate. He holds an IT Engineering degree from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev as well as an MBA from Tel Aviv University. Over the course of his career, he has worked extensively within the sales and technology sectors and held a variety of technical and management roles with companies like Kenshoo, eToro, Google and Roundforest, the latter of which he acted as
How Ellipsis Health Will Change Behavioral Health Diagnosis | Steven Cupps
AlanI’m visiting here today with Steven Cupps, he is the head of Business Development for Ellipsis Health. Welcome to today’s show.Steven Thank you so much for having me.AlanSo Steven, I’d like to hear the background of how you got to the position that you’re in today. What led up to this?StevenBehavioral health has always been a passion of mine. If you think about the entire ecosystem, and in healthcare, it’s really the biggest unmet challenge today. And so what we’re doing at ellipsis is we’re
California LLC Laws And IRS Identity Theft Reporting
A discussion on the tax history of LLC entities i…