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Dealing with New and Emerging Risks in an Ever Changing World

Dealing with New and Emerging Risks in an Ever Changing World. Paul J. Sobel Vice President/Chief Audit Executive – Georgia-Pacific, LLC Vice Chair – Professional Development for The Institute of Internal Auditors. Presentation Outline. The Changing World Impact of Emerging Risks

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Dealing with New and Emerging Risks in an Ever Changing World

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  1. Dealing with New and Emerging Risks in an Ever Changing World Paul J. Sobel Vice President/Chief Audit Executive – Georgia-Pacific, LLC Vice Chair – Professional Development for The Institute of Internal Auditors

  2. Presentation Outline • The Changing World • Impact of Emerging Risks • Evolving Risk Assessment Approach • Dealing with Risks in a Dynamic Business World • Summary

  3. The Changing World • Global and organizational change • Stressed financial structure and cash availability • Bankruptcy and restructuring • Fraud from many fronts • Legislative imperatives and pressure • Technological innovation • Competition for market share • Shareholders demanding increased accountability • Client’s changing expectations • Pressure/expectations from stakeholders and citizens • Strategic alliances • Mergers and acquisitions

  4. Impact of Emerging Risks • New risks keep emerging • Risk interdependencies are creating almost unimaginable risk scenarios • Speed of change has rendered static, annual risk assessments almost meaningless • There seems to be very little tolerance for ineffective risk management

  5. Evolution of Risk Assessments • In the 1980’s a formal risk assessment was an uncommon, somewhat unsophisticated practice • In the 1990’s risk assessment became a “leading practice” • While it was more structured and sophisticated, it still left many “blind spots” • In the early 2000’s, annual risk assessments were a standard practice • Some were updating risk assessments more frequently • Still had “blind spot” issues • The financial crisis beginning in 2008 caused many to question the value of risk assessments

  6. Risk Identification Approach • Continually scan the risk environment • Check available public documents • Search for specialist publications • A lot of good stuff from outside the United States • Deeper knowledge sharing with competitors • Brainstorm previously unimaginable risk scenarios • Disciplined structured process • Embedded in strategic planning (60% of failures relate to strategic risks) • Extensive consideration of interdependent risks • May need to bring in specialists (e.g., economists, analysts, deal makers, regulatory experts) • Consistently challenge the completeness and veracity of all risk assumptions

  7. Risk Assessment – The Past • Traditionally focused on Impact and Likelihood • Tends to be single point outcomes as opposed to range of outcomes • A good foundation, but is it robust enough in today’s business world? High IMPACT Medium Low Remote Possible Probable LIKELIHOOD

  8. Other Risk Assessment Factors • Velocity • Readiness • Capacity • Controllability • Monitorability • Interdependencies • Frequency of occurrence • Volatility • Maturity • Degree of confidence

  9. Risk Velocity • This has become the risk assessment “criteria du jour;” however, there are different types of velocity • Speed of onset • How quickly does the risk descend upon us? • Do we have much warning? • Speed of impact • Do we feel the effects right away, or does the pain slowly increase? • Does it spread and impact us in other ways; e.g. reputation? • Speed of reaction • Even if we see it coming, do we have the agility to timely react?

  10. Risk Readiness • Given that risk represents uncertainty, how ready are we to deal with a risk event? • Focus is on an organization’s ability to: • Recognize the onset of the risk • Respond timely and effectively • Must also consider 3rd parties’ ability to respond timely and effectively • Risk readiness is really the response part of the risk velocity criteria

  11. Risk Capacity • Decisions regarding risk readiness must consider an organization’s capacity to absorb or take on risk • First consider organization’s appetite and tolerance for the risk outcomes (before sustainability is impacted) • Resilience to consequences • Cost/pain to manage • Also consider recovery time – i.e., how long until the outcomes/effects are no longer felt

  12. Other Risk Characteristics • Controllability – Do we even have the ability to mitigate/control the risk? • Monitorability – Can we monitor: • Risk signposts to anticipate risk onset? • Risk impact to understand how much we’re bleeding? • Interdependencies with other risks • Vulnerability to other risks being triggered • Correlation with other risks (Charles Kindleberger)

  13. Other Risk Characteristics • Frequency of Occurrence – Will a risk occurrence likely be a single event or will it occur multiple times? • Risk Volatility – Does the risk lend itself to an infrequent assessment (e.g., annually) or should it be re-assessed on a regular basis? • Risk Management Maturity – Is our risk management mature enough to trust our initial reaction to a risk event? • Degree of Confidence – How confident are we in our risk assessment judgments?

  14. How Do You Make Sense of all This Information? • Mapping Multiple Dimensions Won’t Work!

  15. A Possible Approach? • Start with traditional impact/likelihood assessment • Determine which Other Risk Assessment Factors are relevant and meaningful • Assess whether those factors will significantly, moderately or negligibly affect: • How the risk is managed • How the risk is prioritized relative to other risks • How the risk is monitored and reported

  16. One Example

  17. One Example

  18. A Few Cautions • Don’t make it too formulaic – it’s still primarily about judgments! • Never lose sight of the fact that risk assessment must tie back to strategy • Plan ahead for how you’ll respond to significant risk events • Decisive decision vs. consensus building • Initial response may differ from long-term response

  19. Dealing with Risks in a Dynamic Business World • No one-size-fits-all or simple answers • Starts with good risk information • Identify risk events early • Initiate risk actions quickly • Monitor effectiveness of risk actions • Must have a good escalation process • Who needs what information and when? • Don’t just treat the symptoms; cure the disease • Be flexible to change; don’t become too attached to what worked in the past

  20. In Summary • We live in a dynamic, ever changing business world • The speed of change will continue to increase • The impact of mistakes will become even greater • Identifying possible emerging risk scenarios will be critical to success • In particular, scenarios among interdependent risks • Risk assessment must consider criteria beyond Impact and Likelihood • But don’t make it too complex; it’s still about judgments • Dealing with risk events requires a structured and disciplined approach; an ad hoc, reactionary approach won’t cut it

  21. Questions?paul.sobel@gapac.com

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