Quick Links
Mayan

Breaking News! It's NOT the End of the World!

 

 

Yesterday's The Washington Post broke the big news. It seems the Mayan calendar prophecy - predicting the world will end in December, 2012 - may be a little off base.

  

A newly-discovered "timekeepers' workroom," discovered by archaeologists in Guatemala, revealed a collection of calendars "that destroy any notion that the Mayans predicted the end of the world in 2012," according to the Post report. Whew!

  

Check out the article here. There's lots of interesting information about the calendars and what the Mayans were trying to accomplish by creating them, and the story of how these new calendars was found is pretty cool too.

  

I guess that means you can scrap your December 2012 continuity plans!

 

   

Job Search

Unemployed? Attend DRI2012 for Free!

  

There's still time to take advantage of our offer to unemployed certified professionals. DRI2012 is just about a week away, and if you are a DRI-certified professional and you're out of work, you can attend DRI2012 for free!

 

That's right. You're invited to attend as our guest so that you can network and keep current. We'll provide the free full-conference pass (worth $1,495) and all you have to do is cover your travel and hotel costs.

  

We've had a few grateful and hopeful takers, including one just last night. If you're interested, contact me at brojas@drii.org.

 

 

Gavel Going, Going, Gone!

  

The online auction for the Disaster Recovery International Foundation will close on May 16 at 5 p.m. There are some really fantastic items and your donation not only supports a great cause but also is tax deductible. Some select items will transition to our silent auction on-site in New Orleans (see the list below). If you are not attending, you can utilize absentee bidding online so you don't miss out. Visit the auction at:  www.biddingforgood.com/driif  

  • Giants XLVI Superbowl football autographed by Eli Manning
  • Mookie Wilson autographed baseball
  • Ty Cobb repligraph picture and signed check
  • Cancun vacation, 5 days and 4 nights for a family of four
  • Bradford Portraits, be photographed at world renowned Bradford Portraits Studio in New York
  • HD Televisioin, LG - 47" Class / 1080p / 60Hz / LCD HDTV
  • Canon VIXIA HF R20 Camcorder
  • Kindle Fire
  • Golf Foursome
  • Aaron Neville signed book and CD
  • New York Stock Exchange tour and lunch
  • STOMP tickets
Join Us!

Join Our Mailing List







Drive_header_2
Issue #14May 11, 2012 
Greetings!

Everyone at DRI International (including me!) is super excited about DRI2012, which is now just eight days away!   And we're also super excited that so many of you have decided to join us in New Orleans for our first-ever conference! Thanks for the tremendous show of support and interest.

 

We're all hunkered down here, putting the finishing touches on plans and preparation for New Orleans, and I know that you know all about plans and preparation. But did you know that the world isn't going to end in December and that The Blob is once-again invading the East Coast? Do you want to know what you and peers think of ISO 22301? And do you have a minute to take a new one-question survey on work area continuity? If so, this week's Drive is for you...read on!

 

Buffy Rojas

DRI International Director of Communications

brojas@drii.org

(610) 792-4802

 

Blob Fest: The Ultimate Evacuation Drill!


It crawls. It creeps. It eats you alive! "The Blob," an independently made 1958 American horror/science-fiction film, depicts a giant amoeba-like alien that came from outer space and terrorizes the small community of Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. The film's leading man was Steve McQueen in his debut leading role. And every year, the suburban-Philadelphia town of Phoenixville holds a three-day party (Blob Fest) in honor of its most famous threat, including a reenactment of the film's most dramatic scene, affectionately referred to by locals as "the running out."

 

After consuming a bunch of people including an old man, a doctor, a nurse, a mechanic, the grocery store janitor, and a bar full of late-night drinkers, the Blob enters the Colonial Theater engulfing the projectionist before oozing into the auditorium. The patrons run screaming out of the theater, alerting the assembled townspeople to the danger.

 

The faithfully-restored Colonial is Blob Fest central and the place to be on opening night when the running out is re-enacted by a packed house. I know because I live about 10 minutes from Phoenixville and in the name of BCP, I've participated in this "drill" (for proof, click here).  Tickets go on sale June 1 and the running out sells out within 24 hours. So mark your calendars now and come to Phoenixville July 13-15 for Blob Fest!

 

Survey Provides ISO Answers
Question Heads  

There's a lot of talk about ISO 22301, a new international business continuity management standard. The final draft was recently approved and it is expected to be available sometime later this year. It's officially being called "ISO 22301 Societal security -- Business continuity management systems," and we wanted to know what you think about it. So, we made it the subject of last week's one-question survey.

 

Survey results show that nearly 20 percent of respondents say that they will seek to conform to the standard. What did the other 80 percent say? Visit our LinkedIn for complete survey results and to join the ISO 22301 discussion.

 

This Week's Survey: Work Area Continuity

 

This week's question comes from a Drive reader who wants to know about work area continuity plans. He says he'd "like to know what kind of strategy companies are using for work area recovery space" and calls it a "hot button issue" at his organization.

 

So, click here to answer his question and we'll report the results in next week's Drive!

 

DRI2012: Just Around the (Clyde's) Corner

NOLA

How could it be? DRI2012
 is but a week away. Volunteer Day, which has met an amazingly enthusiastic response, is right around the corner (a mere Clyde's Corner away - sorry couldn't resist). Honestly, I had my doubts about doing a weekly column for the e-newsletter, seemed like a daunting task. As it turns out, it's been a lot of fun, and I sincerely hope you have enjoyed it as much as I have. Next week, I will bring you Clyde's Corner from New Orleans - the heart of the conference and the soul of our volunteer effort. The week after, I will provide a post conference update. And almost that soon the excitement will fade, the enthusiasm, education, and joy of the conference will be a fond memory. And with luck, Clyde's Corner may reappear from time to time.

 

Volunteer Day, which was a mere twinkle in my eye some nine months ago, is now almost a reality. We finally get to swing a hammer, package some food, and give back with compassion and genuine caring. Almost 80 of you will provide your gift of time and energy. Your willingness to donate your muscle and good will is very much appreciated. We have so much in store for all conference attendees, and our volunteer corps will be starting the party a few days early. To all those who are volunteering, please remember to check for updates and instructions sent to you via e-mail.

 

So what have we learned in the last several weeks?   New Orleans is a place with many faces. The beauty of the Garden District, the grittiness of Bourbon Street, the many types of music and food, the festivals, the shopping, the great outdoors, the people, and the charm. New Orleans has a little something for everybody. Whether you want quiet and serene or brash and loud, it's there for you. If you want a tranquil stroll along the Mississippi or a bawdy night of music and dancing, New Orleans provides the appropriate opportunity. If heart wrenching blues is your thing or the mellow, sweet sounds of Jazz, New Orleans has it all. If you crave a big delicious steak or a bucket of crawfish, New Orleans serves it up. If a horse drawn carriage is calling you or if you'd prefer the St. Charles Avenue Street Car, New Orleans makes it happen. If you want to sit in a small café and enjoy a coffee and beignets or if a big Nawlin's breakfast is calling you , guess what? New Orleans has you covered. If you are thinking about visiting a haunted house or doing a cemetery tour, New Orleans is the place. If museums are your thing, New Orleans has plenty. If you'd like to stay in the fanciest of hotels or a charming romantic B & B, the choices are many.

 

New Orleans can be intoxicating - the sites, the sights, the sounds, the aroma of great food, the charm and humor of the resilient people who live there. Let New Orleans overwhelm you with pure enjoyment. Let the conference fill you up with ideas and creative ways to make your programs stronger. Let the volunteer day fill you with a sense of genuine satisfaction. Be prepared to get to know your fellow conference attendees. Allow yourself to be open to new ideas, new friendships, new music, new food, and a brand new conference. Let this conference be on your "must do" list each year. And while you're at it, make volunteerism your passion and commitment in the days and months ahead.

 

I look forward to meeting you all. Please take the time to say hi to me in the Big Easy. Have fun and enjoy learning from the smartest and most accomplished in the business.

 

All the best,

 

Clyde Berger

Disaster Recovery International Foundation

Director of Volunteerism and Vice President

 

p.s. I'd be remiss if I didn't send a special shout out to Melissa Smith, Monica Fedor, Penny Dorr, Angela Devlen, and all Volunteer Day supporting cast and committee members. Thanks you guys! In amongst all the conference planning and DRI International work you do, you helped to steer the volunteerism ship! Your efforts, sensibility, practicality, counsel, and incredible dedication and hard work got us to the goal line. Now the rest is up to y'all - the volunteers!