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Helpful Links

NATO - Allied Quality Assurance Publications (AQAPs)

Current NATO - AQAPs

General Quality Tools & Templates

ASQ Quality Tools & Templates

Unilaterial & Bilateral Cp - Cpk Calculator (Excel template): from Lean Flow Consulting

Process Sigma Calculator

Process Sigma Calculator (from iSix Sigma)

Process Sigma Calculator (from EasyCalculation.com)

DPMO Calculator (from EasyCalculation.com)

DPPM Calculator (from EasyCalculation.com)

Business Continuity Planning (BCP)

The “best” industry standard for BCP is:
NFPA 1600, “Standard on Continuity, Emergency, and Crisis Management” (2019 Edition)
https://www.nfpa.org/codes-and-standards/all-codes-and-standards/list-of-codes-and-standards/detail?code=1600

While NFPA 1600 has been influenced by ISO for many years, it still remains superior to ISO 22301 in many ways (see below).

Although a government standard, another very good standard is:
NIST Special Publication 800-34 Rev. 1, “Contingency Planning Guide for Federal Information Systems
https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/Legacy/SP/nistspecialpublication800-34r1.pdf

While ISO has produced ISO 22301, “Societal security — Business continuity management systems — Requirements”, once you dig through all of the required Annex L nonsense.. and the laughable incompetence of the authors, there are only a few gems buried in it. Similarly, ANSI/ASIS ORM.1-2017, “Security And Resilience In Organizations And Their Supply Chains - Requirements With Guidance” addresses this topic as well (although the ASIS_SPC.1-2009 version was better in some regards). However, it is too similar to ISO 22301 to be of any real value.

Ultimately, any company would be FAR better off simply purchasing a copy of “Business Continuity For Dummies” (which is actually quite good) than either of these two standards.

You may note that NFPA 1600, “Standard on Continuity, Emergency, and Crisis Management” (2019 Edition), Annex E, integrates the requirements of NFPA 1600 with ISO Annex SL. This was done to promote integration with existing ISO Management System Standards… and is “intended to be adopted by the entity at its discretion”. Ultimately, this simply aligns common topics such as document control, corrective action, etc.

Sources for Standards

EverySpec.com (Premiere source for free downloads of U.S. government and military standards, specifications, handbooks, and documents)

Standard Store (Over 180,000 discount priced Standards)

NATO Standards (e.g., AQAPs, ARAMP-01, ALogP series)





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