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Engaging the Executive in Risk Management

Engaging the Executive in Risk Management

By:  Alan Hansell  On: 31 May 2000 For: CIO Canada Creator

CIOs who had responsibility for managing year 2000 remediation activity found themselves experiencing the reversal of Executive Attention Deprivation Syndrome. Instead of struggling to get the attention of the executive, they found their executives and boards hungry for knowledge of how the remediation activity was proceeding. Year 2000 risk management became part of the lexicon of executives and directors and provided a great springboard for executive engagement through ongoing risk-management processes.

It might be argued that risk management is not a new topic for the executive. It has, after all, been part of executive and board responsibilities in some form for many years via presentations by auditors, corporate treasurers and credit managers. The executive has learned how important it is to prepare for risks early in the investment cycle and to be able to extricate funds quickly if the probability of failure looms.

Coincidentally, as the time to market for new technology has shortened and the option of using easily available software from the Internet accelerated, CIOs and executives have had to reassess their risk-management policies and options more frequently. They have also learned the importance of assessing risks early in the system life cycle.

This article examines the need for sound collaborative risk-management practices and why the focus must be on the impact the risk events could have on expected final outcomes. In particular, the article highlights why risk assessment must be done early and often in the systems life cycle -- from opportunity management through to system replacement activity. A seven-step risk assessment process is outlined that executives can use to review their processes.

COLLABORATIVE RISK MANAGEMENT

Because IT-related investment assists business managers in securing the benefits expected from their initiatives, it is critical that executives, including the CIO, collaborate to ensure that the benefits are realized and risks associated with non-achievement are minimized. For the collaboration to work effectively there must be a risk-assessment process in place and clear governance roles.

The governance roles and activities need to be formalized, and cover both demand and supply functions as described and depicted in the diagram ( Figure 1).

The governance roles envisaged are:

• Demand management, involving pursuit of a business opportunity from concept to the realization of expected net benefits, i.e., gross benefits minus costs. This is typically the overall responsibility of the business sponsor and is often delegated to line managers.

• Supply management, as it relates to the acquisition of resources to construct and process the application systems solution on a continuous basis -- typically the responsibility of the CIO.


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Alan Hansell Alan Hansell is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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