Software Engineering Institute Carnegie Mellon

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Introducing the CERT Resiliency Engineering Framework:
Improving the Security and Sustainability Processes

Parent SEI Program

CERT Program

 

Related Publications

Introducing OCTAVE Allegro: Improving the Information Security Risk Assessment Process

Applying OCTAVE: Practitioners Report

Sustaining Operational Resiliency: A Process Improvement Approach to Security Management

 

 

Richard A. Caralli
James. F. Stevens
Charles M. Wallen
David W. White
William R. Wilson
Lisa R. Young

Technical Report
CMU/SEI-2007-TR-009

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As security issues dominate news headlines and affect our daily lives, organizations need to improve their ability to protect and sustain their business-critical assets—people, information, technology, and facilities—using human and financial resources efficiently and effectively. Traditional activities such as security and business continuity must not only be effective at achieving these goals but also must offer the organization increased capabilities for managing and controlling operational resiliency. Unfortunately, organizations often manage these activities in a reactive posture fraught with stove-piped organizational structures and poorly defined and measured goals. The result: potentially less-than-adequate operational resiliency to support business objectives. But organizations can vastly improve operational resiliency by viewing it as an engineering-based process that can be defined, managed, measured, and improved. This view ensures collaboration between security and business continuity activities toward common goals and considers the role of supporting activities such as governance, asset and risk management, and financial control. This report introduces the CERT Resiliency Engineering Framework as a foundational model that describes the essential processes for managing operational resiliency, provides a structure from which an organization can begin process improvement of its security and business continuity efforts, and catalyzes the formation of a community from which further definition of this emerging discipline can evolve.

Additional Author Publications

Richard A. Caralli
James. F. Stevens
Charles M. Wallen
David W. White
William R. Wilson
Lisa R. Young
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