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Agenda BePRO-Seminar & Training December 2009 Print E-mail
Accounting and Finance - Desember 2009
03-04 Moving from an Operational Manager to a Strategic Thinker
03-04 Developing Budget Using MS Excel
03-04 Advanced Corporate Cash Management
03-04 Business Combination Accounting
07-08 Strategic Planning for Banking
07-08 Managers Guide to Improving Internal Control: SOX Approach
07-08 The Controllers in-Action
07-08 Short-Term Financial Management
07-08 Creative Cash flow Reporting (BPRO&LPAI)
07-08 Accounting Information Analysis for Business Decision (4nonFin&Acc)
07-08 Inventory Accounting
07-08 Best Practices of Accounting Control
09-10 Effective Collection for Supervisor in Banking
09-10 Effective Budgeting and Cost Control
09-10 Strategic Skills for Financial Controllers
09-10 Intermediate Finance & Accounting for Nonfinance
09-10 Collection Strategy & Negotiation for Non Financial Company
09-10 Overhead Cost Management
09-10 International Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS)
15-16 Selling Skill for Banking Product
15-16 Strategic Business & Financial Analysis
15-16 Fast Closing Workshop
15-16 Organizing and Managing Accounts Payable
15-17 Planning & Controlling Operations: A Practical Approach for Controller
15-17 Advanced Cost Accounting
15-17 Creative Accounting: Understanding Grey-Area Accounting
21-22 Business Strategy & Plan: A Comprehensive Approach
21-22 Financial Accounting Analysis and Reporting
21-22 The Statement Of Cash Flow (SCF)
21-22 Advanced Cost Control: A Strategic Guide
21-22 Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA)_New!
21-22 Activity-Based Cost Management: Managing Cost & Performance
21-22 Asset and Liability Management
21-23 Developing Budget Control for Operation in Manufacturing Coy.
22-24 A New Paradigm of Management Accounting for Business Decisions
23-24 Financial Statement Analysis
23-24 Treasury Management for Non Specialist
23-24 Finance Policies and Procedures (SOP Finance)
Risk Management - Desember 2009
07-08 Enterprise Risk Management Application
09-10 Managing Risk in Asset Management
15-17 Operational Risk Management
Operation Management - Desember 2009
07-08 Inventory Management: Planning, Replenishment & Activities Ctrl
09-10 Warehouse Management: Strategy, Implementation & CTRL
15-16 Lean Distribution Practices
15-17 Purchasing and Supply Management
21-22 Cost Reduction in Manufacturing Operation
21-22 Profitable Purchasing Strategy and Best Practices
23-24 Supply Chain — Concept, Solution and Application
 
Agenda Training Internal Audit & Fraud - December 2009 Print E-mail

Training/Seminar/Course for Internal Auditor - December 2009

Training/Seminar/Course for Anti-Fraud - December 2009

 
Three Easy Steps to Risk Management PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 28 August 2009 07:49

"All Project Management is Risk Management"

Risk management is an essential activity in any project or organisation. Risk is defined by M_o_R (Management of Risk, the OGC risk management methodology) as uncertainty of outcome. A risk manager is concerned with managing the risks (uncertain issues and incidents) that, were they to occur, would affect the product or services that an organisation sets out to deliver.

The M_o_R framework highlights three basic steps to effective risk management that can be applied within an organisational or project context:

• Identify

The first step of risk management is risk identification. This includes naming and describing any risk that might affect the achievement of objectives, to ensure that there is a common understanding of these risks among all appropriate individuals involved in the organisation or project activity.

Techniques for identifying risks will differ according to the size and structure of the organisation, the nature of the activity or project and the experience of the risk management team. For example, risk management within a small software organisation may involve brain-storming and discussing potential risks to the project, based on the expertise of the developers involved. A large government body, on the other hand, might draw on the experience of risk management experts who have dealt with risks across a range of similar organisations. Project managers responsible for risks to a technical activity might call on the authority of experts to highlight the relevant risks.

• Assess

Evaluation is critical to successful risk management. Without critical analysis of the risks identified in step one, the risk manager may fatally underestimate the potential impact of one particular risk, or (also fatally) attempt to combat each and every risk, without considering how likely it is that a risk will occur.

The two factors that must be considered in risk analysis are:
  • probability
  • potential impact

Individuals responsible for managing risks must also be aware of the organisational context of the risks. For example: Risk A may have a greater impact on Output 1 than the effect of Risk B on Output 2. However, if Output 2 is more important than Output 1 to the overall objectives, then Risk B may be considered more important than Risk A.

Ranking risks according to immediacy, impact and organisational context enables the risk manager to prioritise and plan how individual risks will be controlled.

• Control

The risk manager needs to identify the appropriate response to a risk and assign a risk owner, who ensures that the risk response is carried out, monitored and controlled.

About the Author
Simon Buehring is a project manager, consultant and trainer. He works for KnowledgeTrain which offers management of risk training in the UK and overseas. He can be contacted via the M_o_R Practitioner training website.

Article Source:
http://www.articletrader.com/business/management/three-easy-steps-to-risk-management.html
Last Updated on Monday, 26 October 2009 03:15