1 / 27

Risk Management

Risk Management. Marketing Chapter 34. What is Business Risk. The primary goal of every business is to make a profit There is no guarantee this will happen The possibility of financial loss is known as Business Risk. What is Risk Management.

hada
Télécharger la présentation

Risk Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Risk Management Marketing Chapter 34

  2. What is Business Risk • The primary goal of every business is to make a profit • There is no guarantee this will happen • The possibility of financial loss is known as Business Risk

  3. What is Risk Management • The systematic process of managing an organization’s risks to achieve objectives in a manner consistent with public interest, human safety, environmental needs, and the law

  4. Types of Business Risk • Economic Risk – result from changes in overall business conditions • Natural Risk – changes caused by natural occurrences • Human Risk – changes caused by employee dishonesty, errors, mistakes, or omissions as well as the unpredictability of customers or the workplace itself

  5. Economic Risk • Changes include: • The level or type of competition • Changing consumer lifestyle • Population changes • Inflation • Recession • Limited usefulness or style of product • Product obsolescence • Government regulation

  6. Economic Risk • Competition • Failure to keep up with competition leads to lost sales • New foreign completion threatens business • Products can be produced cheaper over seas

  7. Economic Risk • Consumer lifestyle and population change • Must adapt to changing want and needs of the consumer • A change in population could mean an increase or a decrease in potential consumers • New communities (Ashburn) • Aging communities (rural towns)

  8. Economic Risk • Limited Usefulness and Product Obsolescence • Products inevitably become outdated • VCRs • Atari • Cassette tapes • New products are always being developed • The development of more advanced products makes older ones no longer useful • Film cameras, typewriters, VCRs, portable stereo

  9. Economic Risk • Recession and Inflation • Businesses in areas with high unemployment will suffer because less people are spending • If prices for basic products rise, people will have less disposable income

  10. Economic Risk • Government Laws and Regulations reduce overall profits • Special licenses and permits • Street and Sewer Improvements • Environmental Clean-up • Parking • Product Recalls

  11. Natural Risk • Results in the loss or damage of property and may cause businesses to be shut down. Catastrophes such as: • Floods • Tornados • Hurricanes • Fires • Lightning • Drought • Earthquakes

  12. Natural Risk • Sometimes natural risks are caused by people: • Power outages • Civil unrest • Oil spills • Arson • Terrorism • War

  13. Natural Risk • Businesses can insure against unexpected losses from some natural risks, but not all • Business insurance typically doesn’t cover acts of war or riot • Special insurance is often needed to cover flood and earthquake damage

  14. Natural Risk • Weather is an important natural risk to consider • Some businesses and products depend on predictable weather conditions for success • Ski resorts rely on snow fall • Beach resorts affected by hurricanes • Farmers require sufficient rainfall

  15. Human Risk • Range from the financial impact of robbery or embezzlement to job related illness or injury • Customer Dishonesty: • Customer Theft • NRF determined that retailers lose $15-$37 billion a year from shoplifters • Fraudulent Payment • Nonpayment of accounts

  16. Human Risk • Employee Risk: • Unethical business practices • Embezzlement • Misuse of company goods, resources or supplies • Misuse of company time

  17. Human Risk • Computer-Related Crime • Worms or viruses downloaded by employees accidently • Hackers or employees can penetrate secure networks and access proprietary company information or client lists • Training employees on privacy policies and the proper handling of confidential information is necessary to decrease risk

  18. Handling Business Risk • There are 4basic ways to handle business risk • Risk Prevention and Control • Risk Transfer • Risk Retention • Risk Avoidance

  19. Risk Prevention and Control • Some business risks can be controlled or minimized by: • Screening and Training Employees • Providing Safe Conditions and Safety Instruction • Preventing External Theft • Deterring Employee Theft

  20. Risk Prevention and Control • Screening Employees • Background Checks/Reference Checks • Pre-employment Tests • Drug Testing • Training Employees • Orientation, training and instruction to understand policies and procedures

  21. Risk Prevention and Control • Providing Safe Conditions and Safety Instructions • Design safe employee work zone for traffic and storage • Training on proper ways to lift and store merchandise • Develop accident management programs • Check and correct hazards • Ensure compliance with state and federal regulations • First aid kits near workstations • Distribute written safety and health plans

  22. Risk Prevention and Control • Preventing Theft • Largest and most common form of human risk • Lock up valuable merchandise • Adequate lighting • Tag products with anti-theft devices • Hire security personnel and install security devices

  23. Risk Prevention and Control • Preventing Theft • Robbery: stealing of money or merchandise by violence or threat • Keep limited amounts of money on hand • Hire security guards • Set alarms and lock doors

  24. Controlling Employee Theft • Employee theft represents 48% of all business losses due to theft • Prevention: • Closed circuit television • Cameras concealed in mannequins, ceilings or walls • POS terminals (generates computer reports) • Monitors voids, cash intake, sales and refunds

  25. Risk Transfer • Transferring the risk of loss to another business or party • Purchasing Insurance • Property Insurance – to protect buildings, equipment and machinery • Liability Insurance – to protect company from damages which they can be held legal responsible • Establishing Product Warranty Periods

  26. Risk Retention • When a business retains, or assumes, the financial responsibility for the consequences of loss • Unsold merchandise after a change in trends • Damaged items returned or removed from the sales floor

  27. Risk Avoidance • When a business refuses to engage in particularly hazardous activity • Can often be determined by market research • Is an investment/activity worth the risk

More Related