Incorporating Geopolitical Risk Into Your IT Strategy

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The brief below is a reading aid. The original source material and source link remain the governing reference.

Operational Brief

Geopolitical risks should be included in scenario planning; strengthen cyber basics and build redundancy; IT organizations need to prepare for potential disruptions caused by geopolitical events.

Why It Matters for Texas Credit Unions

The article does not explicitly mention Texas, TX, TCUD, or any Texas-specific entities. The guidance is broadly applicable and relevant to all credit unions but lacks specific references to Texas.

Who this most likely affects

Bounded site guidance: This item is most likely relevant for credit unions with material information-security, technology, or vendor-management exposure.

Why this fit: The source language points to cyber, technology, or third-party oversight risk.

This is site guidance, not a formal determination. CU InfoSecurity and the original source material remain the governing reference.

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Original Source Material

Scenario Planning Must Model Disruption, Strengthen Cyber Basics, Build Redundancy IT organizations know how to plan for outages, but even the most rigorously designed strategy is vulnerable to the shifting winds of geopolitics. CIOs and technology leaders need to know how their organizations will respond to geopolitical disruptions, and scenario planning needs to be a priority.