🌐 International · AI Incident Response Playbook

AI Incident Response Playbook for INTL

A delimiter-split deliverable: an Executive Summary Word document for sign-off (severity-classification scorecard + top 5 likely incident scenarios + sign-off block + 3 embedded charts) plus a 9-sheet operational Excel workbook designed for use under pressure: Severity Classification Matrix (P1/P2/P3/P4 with industry-specific examples + escalation thresholds), 6-Step Response Process (Detect → Contain → Assess → Notify → Remediate → Review with Status dropdown driving the live Dashboard), Regulator Directory (sorted by deadline urgency), 12 Communications Templates (4 severities × 3 audiences: Internal / Customer / Regulator), Evidence Collection Checklist (12 items × Status dropdown), Post-Incident Review framework (RCA 5-Whys + Fishbone categories + Lessons Learned + Corrective Actions Tracker), Live Incident Log Template (empty 10-row template for real-time use), Readme, and Dashboard with native dynamic radar (per-step) + doughnut (overall response readiness).

INTL-specific obligations covered

The output is anchored on the regulations that apply to AI deployments in INTL. The top frameworks cited:

  • OECD Recommendation of the Council on AI (OECD AI Principles, 2024 update)international_framework · Voluntary

    Adherent countries and their organisations are expected to implement five value-based AI principles — inclusive growth, human rights, transparency, robustness and safety, and accountability — and to report on implementation through the OECD AI Policy Observatory.

  • UN General Assembly Resolution — Seizing the Opportunities of Safe, Secure and Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence Systems for Sustainable Development (A/RES/78/265, 21 March 2024)international_resolution · Adopted

    UN member states are encouraged to develop national AI governance frameworks, engage in international cooperation on AI safety and interoperability of governance standards, and ensure AI systems are developed in a manner consistent with international human rights law.

  • Council of Europe Framework Convention on AI and Human Rights (CETS No. 225, 2024)international_treaty · Open for ratification

    State parties must implement legislative or other measures to ensure AI system activities respect human rights, establish oversight and remedy mechanisms for AI-related harms, and prohibit or restrict AI activities incompatible with democracy or the rule of law.

  • ISO/IEC 42001:2023 — Artificial Intelligence Management System (AIMS)international_standard · Published

    Organisations implementing ISO 42001 must establish AI governance policies and objectives, define organisational roles for AI accountability, conduct AI impact and risk assessments, and implement operational controls to address AI risks across the full AI system lifecycle.

How the AI Incident Response Playbook approaches this

You describe your organisation, jurisdiction, industry, risk appetite, and the AI tools currently in use. The tool produces a complete, structured playbook tailored to those inputs — designed to be opened, classified, and acted upon during a real incident.

The Executive Summary Word document is a one-page sign-off artifact for board / leadership. The detailed Excel workbook is the working operational instrument: classify severity, work through the 6 steps, populate the live incident log, dispatch the right communications template per severity tier, collect evidence, conduct the post-incident RCA, and track corrective actions to closure. Both are AI-assisted drafting aids intended to accelerate review by qualified incident-response, data-protection, and sector-regulatory practitioners.

What you get

  • Two artefacts, two jobs: Executive Summary (.docx) for board sign-off, Operational Workbook (.xlsx) for real-time use during an incident — same incident, same source of truth, no fragmentation.
  • P1–P4 severity classification with sector-specific incident examples + risk-appetite-driven escalation thresholds — internally consistent across the matrix, the 6-step process, the comms templates, and the wallet card.
  • 12 ready-to-use communications templates (4 severities × 3 audiences) — no scrambling for wording mid-incident.
  • Live Dashboard with native radar (per-step completion) + doughnut (overall response readiness) that auto-refresh as you toggle Status cells in the 6-Step Response sheet — visual progress for incident commanders without re-generation.

Ready to generate?

$49 · one-time — answer a 6-question intake (including jurisdiction = INTL), and download your tailored document immediately.

Generate Playbook

Also available framed for your sector → see industry-specific pages

AI-assisted drafting aid. The output references INTL regulation but is not legal advice. Have a qualified legal, compliance, or regulatory professional review before implementation.