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18 February 2011 | Updated on 23 July 2024
When we live in uncertain economic times the OGC’s Management of Risk could be the go-to guidance to train for, so that your decisions are less about luck and more about good judgement What is ri...
When we live in uncertain economic times the OGC’s Management of Risk could be the go-to guidance to train for, so that your decisions are less about luck and more about good judgement
That depends; it can mean different things to different people. If you’re organising a garden party rain is a negative risk; if you’re a gardener rain is a positive risk. For an organisation, risk is a threat or an opportunity that could affect it for better or worse or for richer or poorer.
It’s all about how you assess and handle those potential threats and opportunities. Back to the weather analogy: if bad weather is a risk that you didn’t consider then a downpour might force you to ditch your garden party; if you did factor it in and ordered tarpaulin, then whatever the weather, you’re good to go.
Well, I guess it depends on whether you want to gamble on all your decisions being right! Do risk management and do it right and you can cut the chances of failing to achieve your objectives; don’t do it or do it wrong and you can pay a price in terms of cost, time and performance across your organisation.
After all, how hard can risk management be? For decades, for millennia even, organisations and cultures have managed risk without it. Where M_o_R scores, though, is that it’s the complete deal. It provides a generic framework. It’s transparent, consistent and repeatable. It’s organic and evolves. It ties in with other OGC products such as P3O, PRINCE2, MSP and ITIL. In short, Management of Risk supports the control of any risk that could affect the achievement of objectives as case studies show.
Supplying structure to the guidance and supporting corporate governance, the framework is founded on four core concepts: principles, approach, processes and the idea of embedding and reviewing M_o_R so it’s part of company culture.
Coming in at an even dozen and with clear ties to corporate governance, these form the basis on which organisations can develop practices to control risks. They are: organisational context, stakeholder involvement, organisational objectives, M_o_R approach, reporting, roles and responsibilities, support structure, early warning indicators, review cycle, overcoming barriers to M_o_R, supporting culture, and finally, continual improvement, a sure sign of mature risk management.
As always, principles must be put into practice. The M_o_R dozen are the basis on which you can develop sound practices for undertaking risk management suitable for your specific organisation. They are set up in evolving documents: risk management policy, process guide and plans. The guidance helps you further by discussing risk tolerances, by considering responses for positive and negative risks and by outlining how risk registers and issue logs can be used.
No prizes for guessing that the four process steps of risk management are identify, assess, plan and implement. The M_o_R guidance goes further though. For each process it explains: goals (outcomes), inputs (information in), outputs (information out), barriers (possible challenges), techniques (recognized ones) and tasks (that change inputs into outputs). Communication is naturally critical to success so it is woven into the whole process and keeps management in the picture.
If you’re after tick-box style risk management, then M_o_R is not for you. Sure, it provides a route map, checklists and so forth, but its success comes from ensuring risk management is applied across an organisation with constant review and improvement built in. So there’s detail on measuring benefits and success, modifying behaviour on risk management, roles and responsibilities and much more. One of the main themes that comes through it all is that everyone in the organisation has to commit.
The pay-off can be huge. Corporate governance needs are met. Building risk management culture into your organisation will mean that corporate decisions are based on solid information. People feel they have permission to notice and communicate risks. They own and monitor risks; they are accountable for them and proactively manage them. As a result your organisation avoids or mitigates the effects of risks and your company’s chance of achieving strategic objectives improves as many businesses have found to their advantage.Useful Risk Links: