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1 The World at Risk Steve Fowler Chief Executive Officer The Institute of Risk Management December 2005
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2 IRM – Who are we ? nProfessional education in risk management nPractitioner-led with strong links to leading universities and business schools n2000 members across 50 countries nSector independent – members from all branches of the risk profession nNot-for-profit organisation
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3 Areas to cover today nThe World at Risk nEvolution of Risk Management nStandards nSkills and Qualifications
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4 A World at Risk – geological disasters
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5 A World at Risk – weather
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6 A World at Risk – fire and explosion
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7 A World at Risk – environmental contamination
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8 A World at Risk – human failure
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9 A World at Risk – terrorism and threat
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10 A World at Risk – scientific uncertainty
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11 A World at Risk – emerging new risks
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12 A World at Risk – governance
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13 A World at Risk - reputation
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14 A World at Risk – social responsibility
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15 A World at Risk – information systems
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16 A World at Risk – fraud
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17 A World at Risk – financial systems
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18 A World at Risk – resilience & recovery
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19 A World at Risk – supply chains
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20 A World at Risk – projects and change
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21 A World at Risk - achievement
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22 The Risk Management wheel Risk Management Governance Risk Financing Business Continuity Reputation Ethics and Responsibility Personal Effectiveness Reward Political and Societal Risk Analysis & Statistics Information Risk Project Risk Physical Risk Control
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23 So what is Risk Management ? nThe art and science of managing risk nCentral to strategic management nManagement of events & consequences related to opportunities (upside) and threats to success (downside) nIdentification & treatment nContinuous and methodical nIntegrated into the organisation, its objectives, culture, plans, procedures and accountabilities nLed from the top
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24 A Risk Management Standard nNeed for an agreed: n terminology - relating to the words used n process - for implementing risk management n organisation and structure nEarlier standards had not fully addressed risk: n as opportunity, n had been very specific on process, n or had dealt with risk from one angle only
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25 A Risk Management Standard nLaunched in September 2002 nIRM, AIRMIC and ALARM partnership nAdopted by FERMA nCommon risk language & understanding nNot box ticking approach nPitched at CEO level nTranslated into 14 languages nOver 100,000 copies downloaded
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26 FINANCIAL RISKS INTEREST RATES FOREIGN EXCHANGE CREDIT STRATEGIC RISKS COMPETITION CUSTOMER CHANGES INDUSTRY CHANGES CUSTOMER DEMAND HAZARD RISKS CONTRACTS NATURAL EVENTS SUPPLIERS ENVIRONMENT OPERATIONAL RISKS REGULATIONS CULTURE BOARD COMPOSITION LIQUIDITY & CASH FLOW M & A INTEGRATION RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL PUBLIC ACCESS EMPLOYEES PROPERTIES PRODUCTS & SERVICES RECRUITMENT SUPPLY CHAIN INFORMATION SYSTEMS ACCOUNTING CONTROLS INTERNALLY DRIVEN EXTERNALLY DRIVEN Risk Drivers – an example
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27 The Risk Management Process – seven key stages
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28 Next steps with the Standard nSecond stage review underway: n review against COSO, ANZ 4360, PAS 56, OGC MoR, Basel II etc n review against users experiences n input into BSi and ISO work nFocus on principles, not how to nPoint to other sources of guidance nMore clarity on: n Scope of application n Benefits and objectives n Upside risk n People factors
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29 Expert Professional Practitioner Awareness The Risk Education Pyramid……. Formal Qualifications Training Courses
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30 Fellowship Diploma Certificate Management of Risk & Uncertainty IRM programmes
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31 First Degree Programmes, ARM, PRM CRM x 4 (USA, Denmark, Singapore, India), CPRM Executive Programmes and Short Courses Higher Degrees, RIMS Fellow, EFARM …….and around the World
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32 Thank you !
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