In the BCP arena a manual workaround can be defined as a temporary method used to provide for the continuation of critical business functions when normal systems, technology or personnel are unavailable. Once a problem is fixed, a workaround is usually abandoned. Workarounds are also used during a disaster event while a system is being restored.
MHA predicts that in the future our dependence on technology will reduce, but never eliminate, the need for manual workarounds. Complex technology and automated workflows combine with virtually no tolerance for data loss to eliminate manual workarounds as a practical solution for critical processes. That being said, manual workarounds will likely remain a fundamental for BC/DR programs. It is important that those workarounds be carefully considered and constructed to ensure that they do not create more problems than they solve.
Common Problems
Things to Consider
The volume of work vs. time to process – The volume of work will remain constant but the processing will be slower, costing you time and money.
The sustainability of the workaround – How long will the workaround realistically suffice without causing bigger problems, such as unmanageable backlogs and degraded customer service? Your manual workaround will likely create a backlog that will grow exponentially the longer it is used.
Quality of work – Does the quality of your work suffer when you are using a manual workaround? Do you lose information, miss deadlines, etc.?
Customer service – How does the workaround affect your customer service? Can you continue to comply with service level agreements and meet your customers’ expectations?
Ethical considerations – Does you workaround create potential breaches in your security or privacy practices and procedures?