---
title: "Top 6 Effective Tabletop Exercise Scenarios for Business Continuity"
description: "Explore six proven tabletop exercise scenarios to test business continuity plans, strengthen response and recovery, and improve organizational resilience."
url: "https://www.attainium.net/blog/top-6-effective-tabletop-exercise-scenarios-for-business-continuity"
date: "2026-06-06T22:28:39+00:00"
language: "en-US"
---

**Would you like to discuss your next Tabletop Exercise?**

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---

# Top 6 Effective Tabletop Exercise Scenarios for Business Continuity

![Effective Tabletop Exercise Scenarios for Business Continuity](https://www.attainium.net/images/blog/Crisis_Team---52470365.jpg)

[Business Continuity Plans](https://www.attainium.net/products-services/business-continuity-planning "Business Continuity Plans") alone aren't enough to ensure organizations can overcome unexpected situations. These strategies must be tested, revised to cover critical vulnerabilities, and tested again.

[Conducting a Tabletop Exercise](https://www.attainium.net/blog/how-to-conduct-an-effective-tabletop-exercise "Conducting a Tabletop Exercise") scenario can help train staff, raise their awareness of the business continuity plan, and verify their capabilities to communicate, respond, and recover from various events. For organizations looking to strengthen their overall continuity planning, see our [Business Continuity Planning (Plan-A-ware)](https://www.attainium.net/products-services/business-continuity-planning) resources.

**2025 update:** Organizations are seeing sharper spikes in ransomware and multi‑party incidents, with data theft fueling extortion and repeat victimization. Recent industry reporting shows steep year‑over‑year rises in victims listed on leak sites and large-scale takedowns that barely slow threat actors’ rebranding cycles. These dynamics make regular tabletop exercises even more critical to validate playbooks, third‑party dependencies, and executive decision paths.

Looking for a structured, professionally facilitated session? Explore our [Tabletop Exercise services](https://www.attainium.net/products-services/tabletop-exercises).

---

## **Consider one of these six scenarios for your [next Tabletop Exercise](https://www.attainium.net/products-services/tabletop-exercises "Tabletop Exercise"):**

## 1. Cyberattack

*"2023 is considered the most successful year for ransomware groups in history."* -- [Cyberint](https://cyberint.com/blog/research/ransomware-trends-and-statistics-2023-report/ "Cyberint: "Ransomware Trends 2023 Report"")

2025 indicators point to continued escalation: Q1 2025 victims listed on leak sites rose **213% vs. Q1 2024**, and exfiltration volumes across major families jumped ~93%, underscoring why exercises must assume **data theft + encryption** and test comms, legal, and regulator notifications—not just IT recovery.

Digital tactics to expose company data and compromise hardware are becoming more sophisticated. Companies still face the usual threat of viruses, but other threat vectors have emerged. In fact, according to [Cyberint](https://cyberint.com/blog/research/ransomware-trends-and-statistics-2023-report/ "Cyberint: "Ransomware Trends 2023 Report""), "ransomware groups saw unprecedented success, with a 55.5% surge in victims." To make matters worse, there are 100 million active fake technical support scams, and 75 percent of all websites have vulnerabilities.

When considering security, continuity, and recovery efforts, organizations must recognize their digital assets. A recent Global Cybersecurity Status Report by ISACA revealed that nearly half of the respondents expected to experience a cyberattack that year, and only 38 percent were prepared to handle such a situation. With a well-crafted Tabletop Exercise scenario, organizations can focus on the response and recovery strategies, not just at the IT level but also by senior management, that they want to use to mitigate cyberattacks better.

### Exercise Focus:

- Validate credential theft + initial access response (phish, infostealers, MFA fatigue).
- Practice decision thresholds for paying/not paying ransom; test data breach counsel comms.
- Simulate DLPR / press response under double‑extortion timelines.

See how we design and facilitate [Cybersecurity Tabletop Exercises](https://www.attainium.net/products-services/tabletop-exercises "Cybersecurity Tabletop Exercises") that test real-world decision-making and communication under pressure. For more real-world cyber guidance, visit the [Cyber Incident Hub](https://www.attainium.net/resources-articles/first-24-hours-cyber-incident-checklist).

![A Tabletop Exercise can teach staff how to respond to cyberattacks.](https://www.attainium.net/images/blog/2017_Blog_02-14127429.jpg)*A Tabletop Exercise can teach staff how to respond to cyberattacks.*## 2. Active Shooter and Workplace Violence

Danger in the workplace is an unfortunate possibility that must be trained for. Active shooter and workplace violence drills are becoming more common across a variety of industries. In fact, two-thirds of U.S. schools hold active shooter drills over the year, according to Slate. If such an event happened at your organization, would your staff know what to do? Tabletop Exercise scenarios should focus first and foremost on life safety and security as well as establishing internal and external communications.

### Micro-FAQ: Active Shooter Tabletop Exercises

- Who should participate beyond security? Include Human Resources, Communications/PR, Facilities, and executive decision makers to validate notification, lockdown, and reunification plans.
- How do we exercise without causing distress? Use tabletop-style discussion instead of physical reenactments, provide clear content advisories in advance, and focus on decision flows, communication protocols, and coordination — not on role-playing the incident itself.

## 3. Pandemic and Mass Illness

Pandemics aren't everyday occurrences, but organizations can be majorly impacted by advancing superbugs and powerful flu viruses. If the flu is going around, staff numbers will likely fluctuate due to sickness and the need to take care of sick family members. This can impact the chain of command and how an organization will continue to serve its members and customers. Tabletop Exercises for this scenario focus on crisis communications and policies during these times, what should happen when staff attendance dips, and how to handle fatalities.

In 2025, pandemic planning has evolved into broader workforce disruption preparedness. Beyond illness, tabletop exercises should address sudden staffing shortages from overlapping causes — seasonal illness spikes, caregiver absences, transportation disruptions, or localized emergencies. Scenarios should pressure-test cross-department coordination, leadership messaging cadence, and the continuity of critical workflows when key personnel are unavailable.

## 4. Data Corruption or Loss

*"There was a 20% increase in data breaches from 2022 to 2023."* -- [HBR](https://hbr.org/2024/02/why-data-breaches-spiked-in-2023 "HBR article: "Why Data Breaches Spiked in 2023"")

In 2025, repeat victimization and incomplete data recovery have become more common, with some organizations discovering that even after paying for restoration, data sets remain corrupted or incomplete. Tabletop exercises should validate backup integrity, test offline restore procedures, and ensure executive teams can communicate realistic recovery timelines to stakeholders.

Company information is sensitive and valuable to everyday operations. If this data is compromised or lost, expenses increase considerably to recover it, not to mention costs for compliance failures and missed revenue opportunities. There was a 20% increase in data breaches from 2022 to 2023, according to the [Harvard Business Review](https://hbr.org/2024/02/why-data-breaches-spiked-in-2023 "HBR article: "Why Data Breaches Spiked in 2023""). However, many companies chose to keep the full extent of their data breach incidents private, limiting the knowledge of exactly how many people and businesses have been impacted. A Tabletop Exercise in this area will help organizations identify what data is most important to their operations, how to respond to media, how to retrieve available backups, and how to restore sensitive documents.

### Exercise Checklist: Data Loss/Corruption Tabletop

- Confirm the process for identifying the last known good backup and determine who is responsible for it.
- Walk through restore time estimates (RTO/RPO) and compare them to actual business impact tolerances.
- Draft or review executive-level communications for the board and regulators during prolonged recovery.

## 5. Natural Disasters

As much as 35 percent of downtime occurs due to a natural disaster, according to Infrascale. Certain areas of the country are more prone to particular weather events than others. For example, the West Coast is known for earthquakes and wildfires, while the East Coast has hurricanes and snowstorms. These situations can prevent staff from working and cause operational disruptions. A Tabletop Exercise can be tailored to handle the natural disasters that will likely occur in your area. Organizations can test the Business Continuity Plan and identify areas needing improvement or revision.

In 2025, many organizations are adding compound-event scenarios to their planning — for example, a severe storm combined with a communications outage and a third-party service disruption — to validate both local response plans and supplier resilience under stress.

![Multiple disruptions can impact a business's ability to function.](https://www.attainium.net/images/blog/2017_Blog_02-14121965.jpg)Multiple disruptions can impact a business's ability to function.## 6. Multiple Disruptions

When things go wrong, it can seem like everything is being sent into chaos simultaneously. This is all about "multiple battles on multiple fronts." For example, perhaps a train crashed and triggered a gas explosion. Staff members are injured or kept from coming to work. Not to mention, the explosion started a fire that's spreading. Businesses must understand how to manage multiple disruptions at once. Tabletop exercises for scenarios like this provide insight into how multiple disruptions should be reflected in your Business Continuity Plan.

**Facilitator prompt:** Identify the top three internal and external interdependencies that could create cascading failures, and determine the first two executive-level decisions you would need to make within the first 30 minutes.

---

## FAQ: Tabletop Exercises &amp; Business Continuity

**What is a tabletop exercise vs. a drill?**

- A tabletop exercise is a guided discussion that tests decision-making, communication, and coordination in a simulated scenario. A drill involves hands-on execution of specific tasks, such as evacuating a building or switching to backup systems.

**How long should a tabletop exercise take?**

- Most exercises run two to four hours. Executive-level “decision labs” can be done in 90 minutes while still achieving meaningful outcomes.

**Who should attend?**

- Include process owners and decision makers from across your organization. For cyber or privacy-related scenarios, include Communications, Legal, and IT Security teams.

**How often should we run one?**

- At least annually; higher-risk organizations often run semi-annual or thematic tabletop exercises.

**Can we do this ourselves?**

- Yes — resources like [CISA’s Tabletop Exercise Packages](https://www.cisa.gov/resources-tools/services/cisa-tabletop-exercise-packages) provide free templates. Many organizations choose a facilitator to raise realism, keep discussions on track, and document after-action items.

---

## What Tabletop Exercise scenarios should your organization pursue this year?

[Tabletop Exercises](https://www.attainium.net/products-services/tabletop-exercises "Tabletop Exercises") can (and should) be customized to your specific industry, geography, facilities, and participants while focusing on the communication, response, and recovery skills you want to exercise. [Contact Attainium today](https://www.attainium.net/about-us/contact-us "Contact Attainium today") to learn more about our [Tabletop Exercises](https://www.attainium.net/products-services/tabletop-exercises "Tabletop Exercises") and how they can benefit your [business continuity planning efforts](https://www.attainium.net/products-services/ "Business Continuity Planning Services").

To review essential planning fundamentals, check out our [Business Continuity Plan Checklist](https://www.attainium.net/blog/business-continuity-plan-checklist).

---

Let us work with you on your next tabletop exercise.

Get guidance on objectives, scenarios, logistics, and budgets for the best possible tabletop exercise experience.

---

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