Group 7: OF Management Studies
Group 7: OF Management Studies
GROUP 7
GROUP MEMBERS:
NAME PALLAVI KULKARANI SNEHA MALI SANKET DEDHIA ANAGHA KOTHAWALE JIGNESH KAMBLE KARTIK NADAR
Introduction
Risk management is an important part of planning for businesses. The process of risk management is designed to reduce or eliminate the risk of certain kinds of events happening or having an impact on the business.
WHAT IS RISK?
The chance of something happening that will have an impact on objectives. A risk is often specified in terms of an event or circumstance and the consequences that may flow from it. Risk is measured in terms of a combination of the consequences of an event and their likelihood. Risk may have a positive or negative impact.
3. Minimize the potential severity of the adverse event. 4. Shifting the burden of the financial impact of the adverse event to a third part. This is the essence of insurance
TYPES OF RISK
There are many different types of risk that risk management plans can mitigate. Common risks include things like accidents in the workplace or fires, tornadoes, earthquakes, and other natural disasters. It can also include legal risks like fraud, theft, and sexual harassment lawsuits. Risks can also relate to business practices, uncertainty in financial markets, failures in projects, credit risks, or the security and storage of data and records.
OPERATIONAL RISK
Operational risk can be summarized as human risk; it is the risk of business operations failing due to human error. Operational risk will change from industry to industry, and is an important consideration to make when looking at potential investment decisions. Industries with lower human interaction are likely to have lower operational risk.
IT INCLUDES
a) b) c) d) e) f) g)
Internal Fraud. External Fraud. Employment Practices and Workplace Safety. Clients, Products and Business Practices. Damage to Physical Assets. Business Disruption and System Failures. Execution, Delivery and Process Management.
CREDIT RISK
The higher the perceived credit risk, the higher the rate of interest those investors will demand for lending their capital. Credit risks are calculated based on the borrowers' overall ability to repay. This calculation includes the borrowers' collateral assets, revenue-generating ability and taxing authority (such as for government and municipal bonds). Credit risk is closely tied to the potential return of an investment, the most notable being that the yields on bonds correlate strongly to their perceived credit risk.
REPUTATIONAL RISK
Reputational risk, often called reputation risk, is a type of risk related to the trustworthiness of business. Damage to a firm's reputation can result in lost revenue or destruction of shareholder value, even if the company is not found guilty of a crime. Reputational risk can be a matter of corporate trust, and can be informational in nature or even financial.
Vision The vision of the Department of Risk Management and Insurance is that risk will be established as an academic discipline. Goals We will implement our mission and realize our vision by:
Developing the leading program of scholarship that unifies characterization of the financial and non-financial domains of risk. It will o Characterize the perception and management of risk at the level of different agents (individuals, households, institutions and society), o Enhance the tools of analysis for the demands of this discipline, and o Demonstrate how effective risk management should be applied to address important real-world problems and inform social policy. Preparing students for careers in the variety of professions that seek to improve the welfare of individuals, households, institutions and societies through the efficient management of risk. Influencing policy and practice by providing significant intellectual leadership to our constituencies.
There are as many different types of strategies for managing risk as there are types of risks. These break down into four main categories. Risk can be managed by accepting the consequences of a risk and budgeting for it. Another strategy is to transfer the risk to another
party by insuring against a particular, like fire or a slip-and-fall accident. Closing down a particular high-risk area of a business can avoid risk. Finally, the manager can reduce the risks negative effects, for instance, by installing sprinklers for fires or instituting a back-up plan for data.
Minimize Risk Minimize claims and disputes Long term cost savings Quality improvement Quick risk response solutions alternatives
DISADVANTAGES Time consuming Unforeseen risk Consume more resource to conduct NONE 58% 30% 8% 13%
The analysis clearly shows that the advantages of Risk Management surpass the disadvantages of it. The advantages of Risk Management are the minimization of risk, long-term cost savings, quality improvements, and quick risk responses. Most of the correspondents provided all these advantages as cited. However, one correspondent also quoted the minimization of claims and dispute as its advantage by the project having clear baseline.
The disadvantages of Risk Management are process being very objective and subjective, involvement of uncontrollable variables, and overdependence on easy methods for solving complex process. The other drawback is the non-information sharing between higher management and bottom group resulting into bottom group being isolated from the process. Also, as cited by correspondents, there is always a lack of resources and it is a costly exercise.
Note: Risk management is not the management of insurable risks. Insurance is an important way of transferring risk but most risks will be managed by other means. {Having a risk management plan is an important part of maintaining a successful and responsible company. Every company should have one. It will help to protect people as well as physical and financial assets.}